The fast-casual Mexican restaurant, known for its huge burritos and bowls stuffed with highly customizable ingredients, is at 10715 Broadway in Crown Point. It will feature a drive-up digital pickup lane so customers can get orders they placed on Chipotle.com or the Chipotle app handed to them without even getting out of their car.

A favorite among millennials and anyone who likes cool, creamy guac, Chipotle also has Region locations in Highland, Munster, Merrillville, Portage and Valparaiso.

The new Crown Point Chipotle will be open from 10:45 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven days a week.

Coming soon

A 2,100-square-foot Starbucks alsois under construction on Broadway by Crown Point’s new Chipotle restaurant.

Crown Point Planning Administrator Anthony Schlueter said the chain coffee shop, which will be the second Starbucks in Crown Point when it opens, is a standalone building with a drive-thru. Seattle-based Starbucks closed its coffee shop at 10761 Broadway nearby a decade ago when it shuttered more than 600 stores nationwide.

Closed

In a blow to local meat lovers and carnivores everywhere, Dickey’s Barbecue Pit has closed its Highland location at 8359 Indianapolis Blvd. in the troubled Highland Ultra Plaza, which is being foreclosed upon after the anchor Ultra store closed as a result of the 2017 Central Grocers bankruptcy.

The phone is disconnected, and Highland has been removed from Dickey’s locations page on its website.

A spokeswoman did not return a request for more information.

The Dallas-based chain claims to offer “Legit. Texas. Barbecue.” Its menu features many slow-cooked meats like beef brisket, pulled pork and ribs, which customers could sample on two-meat or three-meat plates.

The fast-casual counter-service barbecue restaurant chain shuttered its location a few miles south at 713B Indianapolis Blvd. in Schererville in 2014. It’s down to just three locations in the entire state of Indiana, with the Portage restaurant at 6200 U.S. 6 being the only local Dickey’s left.

It’s the latest in a series of departures at the Highland Ultra Plaza, where Fallas, Dollar General, and Taco & Burritos Rancho Grande have also closed in the wake of the Ultra departure and foreclosure.

Relocating

Bee & Me Boutique is on the move again after losing its lease to the former Renovar space at 100 S. Broad St., at the corner of Main and Broad streets in downtown Griffith.

But the five-year-old boutique, which sells Magnolia home decor and clothes, isn’t going far.

Bee & Me is moving right across the street to the former Griffith State Bank, which is being transformed into The Bank.quet Gatherings & Events to host weddings, company parties and other special events. The boutique had been squirreled away in an industrial park on the southeast side of town before moving to the heart of Griffith’s downtown earlier this year.

It’s home to a Cute as a Cupcake express shop and also sells school uniforms, spirit wear and flame-resistant work clothes for steelworkers.

It’s slated to close its current location on Jan. 12 and reopen across the street when the old bank renovation is complete.

A new strip mall is being built near the Strack & Van Til supermarket at 109th Avenue and Broadway in Crown Point.

Crown Point Planning Administrator Anthony Schlueter said the 5,400-square-foot strip mall would have three units. He’s heard it will be home to a coffee shop and a pizza place.

Coming soon

Beer and barbecue soon will be replaced with down-home Southern cooking at the old Lowell water plant at 241 N. Liberty St. in downtown Lowell.

The Old Lowell Watering Hole and Bub’s BBQ revived the historic building by the post office, opening in August but closing recently after the business partnership dissolved.

The building has since been sold to new owners, including Leigh Burke.

Burke said the new restaurant in the old water plant, which was decommissioned in the 1990s, would have more of a “Southern home cooking theme,” would not include a brewery and would open in the next 60 days or so. A new name will be chosen “very shortly.”

Right after hemp was legalized with the signing of the U.S. farm bill earlier in December, Blackbird Hemp opened a CBD dispensary in Crown Point.

Owners Corey Lurtz and Dennis Hein opened the shop at 449 E. Summit St. in Crown Point. It sells CBD, or cannabidiol, products that are being hyped across the country as a treatment for inflammation, anxiety, depression and various other ailments. The business is cash-only, awaiting federal regulations that would allow banks and credit card companies to do business with hemp merchants.

Since CBD oil was decriminalized in Indiana in March, many retailers in the Region have started selling it, including pharmacies, fireworks stores and skateboard shops. Market researcher Brightfield Group estimates CBD may grow into a $22 billion industry nationwide by 2022.

Blackbird Hemp is focused entirely on selling CBD products. It carries more than 100 products including tinctures, capsules, gummies, bath bombs, salves, lotions, coconut oils and vaping cartridges. Users might apply a salve for a topical inflammation, take a pill for other issues, and use a vape cartridge for anxiety, because it is fast-acting, taking effect in about 15 minutes.

“We have just about everything,” Hein said. “We have dog treats and pet tinctures.”

The dispensary carries established brands such as Green Lotus Hemp, Lazarus Naturals Hemp and Sun State Hemp, and sources many of its products from small farms and co-ops in Colorado, Washington and Kentucky. Customers — who often skew older — use it to treat neuropathy, epilepsy, Parkinson’s, inflammation and anxiety, among other conditions. Some try to use it to regulate blood sugar, blood pressure or digestive health.

“We try to educate our customers on what to take and how to take it,” Hein said. “Education is a building block and the key. We point them to things they can go home and research on their own. For the longest time, hemp had basically been a boogeyman but it’s becoming more normalized as more research and studies are coming out about the health benefits.”

A post in Harvard Medical School’s Harvard Health Blog said CBD may be effective at managing anxiety, insomnia and chronic pain, but that it could have side effects like nausea and fatigue. Some CBD promoters overstate its curative powers, according to the blog, and more research is needed to determine CBD’s effect. People should consult their doctors before using it, the Harvard blog concludes.

Blackbird Hemp hopes to organize an annual hemp festival with educational seminars at the Lake County Fairgrounds in Crown Point, launch its own Blackbird-branded products and open more locations around the Region. Once it can accept debit and credit card payment, it hopes to establish a subscription service in which payments are automatically deducted and CBD is mailed out to customers.

“We’re looking to bootstrap this up,” Hein said. “Expansion will be doable, but we’ll do it step-by-step. We’re focused on good-quality products and getting it out to the public.”

The dispensary offers 15 percent discounts to seniors, first responders, members of the military and union members.

Blackbird Hemp is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday.

Poke places specializing in Hawaiian raw fish bowls have sprung up all over Chicago in recent years, serving sushi-like pieces of uncooked tuna and salmon tossed in soy sauce and sesame oil atop beds of rice, with avocado and other fresh ingredients.

A few places in Northwest Indiana have poke on the menu, such as Kitaro Surf & Turf in Munster, but the hot restaurant trend is finally coming to the Region.

A sign in the strip mall that’s home to Panera Bread and Qdoba Mexican Eats at the corner of U.S. 30 and Broadway in Merrillville announced that Pokéman Restaurant is coming soon.

The owners could not be reached for comment. Apparently unrelated poke restaurants with the Pokeman or Poke-man name have cropped up in cities like Philadelphia, Las Vegas, Vancouver and West Hartford, Connecticut, but it’s not clear if there’s any potential intellectual property dispute with the popular Pokémon video game and anime franchise that enjoyed a massive resurgence in popularity when Pokémon Go was released in 2016.

Open

South suburban Dozeli Pizzeria, which has locations in Chicago Heights and South Chicago Heights, has opened in the former Enzo’s space at 1120 W. U.S. 30 in Schererville.

The pizzeria offers both thin crust and deep dish pizza, as well as “deluxe” sandwiches like Italian beef and chicken Parmesan. The extensive menu includes wings, salads, appetizers, and both hot and cold sub sandwiches.

The small Chicagoland chain, which was founded in 2008, bakes pies including Italian beef pizza, a chicken Alfredo pizza, and a “Meaty Lover’s Pizza” topped with five different meats.

Unlike the other locations, the Schererville restaurant does not have a grill yet, so no hot dogs or hamburgers are available. With no dining room, it is carryout and delivery only, delivering within about a five-mile range.

Dozeli Pizzeria is currently open from 11 a.m. to midnight Monday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Friday and Saturday, and from 12 p.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday.

Former Indianapolis Colts player Gary Brackett plans to open a Stacked Pickle restaurant in Lansing before the end of 2019.

The linebacker and Super Bowl champion has been looking to expand his sports-themed sit-down restaurant and bar chain in the Region. He’s also been looking for franchisees to open Stacked Pickle restaurants in places like Schererville, Merrillville, Crown Point and Gary.

The casual dining restaurant serves traditional American fare like burgers, wings and its namesake fried pickles in a “family-friendly atmosphere.”

Founded eight years ago, the fast-growing Stacked Pickle now has nine restaurants in Indiana, and has signed on franchisees in Houston, Orlando and Dayton, Ohio.

The restaurants, whose top-selling items include a burger and wings combo, typically seat about 150 diners and employ up to 50 people.

Open

How does that song go?

Stop, in the name of burritos?

Stop, it’s burrito time?

At any rate, Burrito Stop Mex and American Grill recently opened at 1421 119th St. in downtown Whiting, adding to the lakefront city’s Mexican cuisine options.

The fast-food restaurant, which incorporates a big red stop sign into its logo, offers burritos and bowls with a choice of steak, chicken, barbacoa, carnitas, ground beef and veggies.

Burrito Stop also serves gorditas, tortas, XL quesadillas, tacos, salads and dinner platters with steak or chicken that are served with rice, beans and tortillas.

Prices range from $2.25 for a taco to $14.99 for a flame-grilled skirt steak meal.

Burrito Stop is open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday. It’s closed on Sundays.

For more information, call 219-370-5151.

Open

Also in taco news, Mas Tacos has opened a carryout restaurant at 8020 Kennedy Ave. in Highland.

The eatery, which has a small waiting area, serves tacos, tortas, sopas, gorditas, burritos, enchiladas, tamales, nachos, 99-cent chicken flautas and the Mas Special, which is rice topped with lettuce, tomato, cheese, sour cream, jalapenos and one’s choice of meat.

It’s open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday to Sunday.

For more information, call 219-879-3326.

Open

Fifth Third Bank recently opened a new branch on Franklin Street by Ames Field in Michigan City, Mayor Ron Meer said.

The branch, at 2604 Franklin St., has a drive-thru and an ATM.

Cincinnati-based Fifth Third, so named after the merger of Fifth National Bank and Third National Bank and not some random fraction, is a Fortune 500 company with more than 1,100 branches in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, Tennessee, West Virginia, Florida, Georgia and North Carolina.

Anyone who loves huge Mission-style burritos stuffed with their choice of fresh ingredients won’t have to wait much longer for Chipotle Mexican Grill to finally open in Crown Point.

The widely influential Newport Beach, California-based chain, a favorite among millennials and anyone who appreciates a high degree of customization, plans to open its first Crown Point location on Jan. 8 at 10715 Broadway.

Chipotle is known for its assembly line-like service in which burritos, tacos, bowls and salads are constructed with a selection of ingredients like barbacoa, carnitas and guacamole. It has been considered the gold standard of the fast-growing fast-casual segment with many restaurateurs scrambling to be the first to open “the Chipotle of pizza,” “the Chipotle of Greek food,” and so on. But Chipotle’s reputation was dinged after E. coli outbreaks and other food safety concerns in 2015.

Chipotle was originally supposed to open in Crown Point on Saturday but the opening was pushed back. A company spokesperson said no further delays are expected.

In a novelty for a Chipotle, at least in Northwest Indiana, the new Crown Point restaurant will feature a drive-up pickup lane for customers who place and pay for orders on the Chipotle app or at Chipotle.com.

The restaurant will be open from 10:45 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily.

Open

Also in Mexican-themed chain restaurant news, Taco Bell has opened at 917 Joliet St. in Dyer, near the Jewel-Osco supermarket at U.S. 30 and Calumet Avenue.

Especially popular among perpetually hungry teenagers and late-night bar-goers, the Tex-Mex-ish fast-food chain, known for a value menu where ingredients like Fritos chips are wrapped in a tortilla and sold for a buck or so, serves chalupas, XXL Grilled Stuft Burritos and whatever a “crunch wrap” is.

“For many people, joining a gym can be an intimidating experience,” Anytime Fitness Regional Manager Kevin Scott said. “Our gym is big enough to feature everything you need for a great workout and small enough to provide personalized attention for all of our members. Whether weight loss is your goal, or increased strength or improved balanced and flexibility — or a combination of some of those things — at Anytime Fitness, we’re able to help you achieve whatever results you seek.”

On average, Anytime Fitness gyms are staffed for 12 hours a day but can be accessed by members at any time day or night — hence the name — with a key fob. Members also have access to any of Anytime Fitness’s more than 4,000 clubs worldwide.

“We make it easy for our members to exercise whenever and however they like,” Scott said. “We have personal trainers available to help you learn how to use all of the equipment and to develop an individualized workout plan, if you like. And, our Personal Training and Group Training programs are optimized to provide efficient workouts in 1-on-1 settings as well as small & large group settings. All training programs are designed to provide guidance, accountability and of course results.”

Granite & Quartz Tops is moving into the former Lynn’s Bedding at 1862 W. U.S. 30 in Merrillville.

Merrillville-based Commercial In-Sites brokered the sale of the property to the new owner, which is opening its first location in Indiana. The showroom will feature custom granite, marble and quartz countertops.

Commercial In-Sites said in a news release the new countertop showroom should open in early summer 2019.

Closed

Starbucks shuttered its coffee shop at 2531 Willowcreek Road in Portage, the oldest Starbucks in Porter County’s most populous city.

The Seattle-based purveyor of cold brew, Frappuccinos and other strong espresso drinks that power people through the day, still has two other Portage locations, at 6030 U.S. 6 and 6295 Ameriplex Drive.

Closed

Don Pedro’s, a Tex-Mex restaurant that offered steak, seafood and Mexican staples like enchiladas, quesadillas and Huevos Con Chorizo, has permanently closed its long-standing location at 7840 U.S. 41 in Schererville.

A favorite spot for Mexican cuisine among many in the Tri-Town, the restaurant had a bar that served drinks like Corona-ritas with an upturned Corona bottle jutting out of a margarita glass. It had some authentic menu items like menudo and pozole.

“It is with great sadness that we inform you after 16 amazing years in business we have come to the difficult decision to close our doors and focus on our next business venture,” the owners said in a note posted on the door. “It has been an incredible journey. Thanks to all our wonderful patrons and to the NW Indiana community. Please feel free to visit the original Don Pedro’s located in Calumet City, Illinois. Thank you.”

Business Ins and Outs

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Golden Corral and Vegas Cafe reopening soon in Schererville, Smallcakes has opened

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A Golden Corral on military appreciation night in 2017. The Schererville location will reopen before the end of the year.

The Goldn Corral buffet will make its triumphant return to Schererville before year’s end, though likely after Christmas.

The owners of the Merrillville Golden Corral have made extensive renovations to the Golden Corral at 915 Eagle Ridge Dr., by the Home Depot, in Schererville. The buffet had served its last slice of ham and scoop of mashed potatoes three years ago.

“We completely remodeled the place,” General Manager Ken Churchill said. “We put in a fireplace, recessed lighting and all new decor on the inside. Everything is bright and shiny. It’s like a brand new store opening.”

There’s no official opening date yet, but Golden Corral is working to hire 200 workers, including servers, cooks and cashiers.

“The menu will be pretty similar to the Merrillville location, with some small differences,” Churchill said.

The Raleigh, North Carolina-based chain has been frequently updating its menu recently, adding new items every three months like prime rib, fajitas and different kinds of wings.

“It keeps the customers coming in,” Churchill said.

Open

Smallcakes Cupcakery and Creamery has opened at 336 Indianapolis Blvd., next to the new Rosati’s Pizza, Buona Beef and McAlister’s Deli in the Shoppes on the Boulevard.

Gloria Jean’s franchisee Raed Naser, his wife Noor Musleh, his brother and their family opened the chain, which has been featured on the Food Network’s “Cupcake Wars” and “The View.” It features 18 different flavors of cupcakes daily, including 14 regular flavors and four that change daily.

“We have 365 different recipes that we cycle through,” Naser said.

Popular items at the 1,500-square-foot cupcakery and ice cream parlor, which seats 12, include red velvet cupcakes and smashes, in which a cupcake is paired with two scoops of ice cream in a mason jar.

“They’re delicious and perfect for Instagram and social media,” he said. “They look great, and people like to share it.”

The restaurant employs 12 workers and serves only cupcakes baked freshly that day. Leftovers are donated to charitable organizations and other places like local hospitals and nursing homes.

“You can ask to be on the list, and then we call through it until we find someone to take the leftovers,” Naser said. “We only serve fresh cupcakes.”

A grand opening celebration is planned for 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 15. Smallcakes will give away mini cupcakes while supplies last, offer 40 percent off on everything all day, have family-friendly activities like balloon animal-making, and will enter customers into a raffle.

Vegas Cafe at 800 Cedar Parkway in Schererville ran out of luck, closing earlier this year.

But its fortunes have changed.

Jorge Armando and Shelly Ann Armando, the owners of Skillet’s Bistro in Highland, bought the restaurant and plan to reopen it as Vegas Bistro Cafe in the middle of January.

The reborn eatery will focus on quick breakfast items and sandwiches. Nothing on the menu will cost more than $7.60, as the restaurant will target passing truckers and workers at stores and restaurants along Indianapolis Boulevard in Schererville and Highland.

“We want to give workers a good-priced breakfast or BLT or something like that,” Jorge Armando said. “It’s going to be good for workers who come in the early morning on their way to work. Drivers can call ahead to order their food in advance. We have a huge parking lot and will bring it out to them. It will be like 1960s service without the roller skating.”

Vegas Cafe Bistro will seat 46 people inside, and another 18 outside during warmer weather. It will serve beer, wine, wine-based cocktails and espresso drinks such as lattes and espressos.

The menu will include skillets, omelets, waffles and many items that can be prepared quickly.

“We have a good team and have been practicing getting breakfast sandwiches out in no more than five minutes,” he said. “We want to offer a quick breakfast.”

It will be cheap, with hot dogs for $2 and hot dogs with fries and a drink for $4.25. The lunch menu also will include burgers, soups and chili.

“Schererville was a point of interested because it’s been a draw for all the towns around it, including Chicago,” he said. “I’ve lived in Dyer for such a long time and see so many people, including from the city and Illinois, coming here to have a good meal, good shopping, or a buy a good house. Just look at the amount of cars going by.”

Business Ins and Outs

Sophia’s House of Pancakes is taking over the Applebee’s in Schererville.

Tony V. Martin, The Times

There’s no more “eating good in the neighborhood” in Schererville after Applebee’s closed near the intersection of U.S. 30 and Indianapolis Boulevard, disappointing fans of $1 drink specials, 2 for $20 date nights, steaks crisscrossed with huge grill marks, and whatever riblets are.

The Schererville Applebee’s has gone extinct but a new era of fluffy golden pancakes is upon us.

Sophia’s House of Pancakes, a popular pancake house on Indianapolis Boulevard, plans to take over the space and open another location there.

A sign posted at the recently shuttered Applebee’s Grill + Bar at 650 W. U.S. 30, in the Crossroads Shopping Center in Schererville, said Sophia’s is opening there soon. The family-style diner, which also has a location at Orland Park in Illinois, is known for its stacks of old-fashioned, powdered sugar-dusted pancakes and for its hearty breakfasts with huge portions, including five-egg omelets. One reviewer on Yelp called it “the Grand Kingdom of Breakfast” with “a menu the size of the Sunday paper” and skillets “the size of glacially carved freshwater basins.”

Opening

If $4 seems a little steep to you for a car wash, you’re in luck.

Birdie’s $3 Car Wash hopes to open as soon as December at 10567 Broadway in Crown Point.

Owner Mike Mahmoud has dreamed of opening a car wash since childhood.

“As a little kid I worked with my father at grocery stores in the city,” he said. “There was a hand car wash with a line around the block. I saw the potential of how much cash a car wash could make.”

Car washes start at $3 and go up, depending on the level of cleaning one wants. Similar $3 car washes have opened in recent years in Hammond and Dyer.

“It’s a price point that’s affordable to everybody,” Mahmoud said. “If you drive by a $5 car wash, you think, ‘maybe.’ But $3 is a price you don’t want to pass up.”

Birdie’s $3 Car Wash also will sell monthly memberships allowing people to get their car washed every day or as frequently as they want.

The Crown Point car wash is largely built-out and expects to open in a matter of weeks, in the busy season where many people try to get the road salt washed off their cars. It has a 140-foot tunnel and 20 vacuums. Mahmoud has talked with his banker about building 10 of them across Northwest Indiana and hopes to eventually take the brand national. The next one will be in St. John, and then he’ll look at Illinois locations.

“We’ll take baby steps,” he said. “Of course I’d like to go nationwide. But these are big projects. These aren’t $100,000, $200,000 projects. These are $4 million apiece.”

Birdie’s $3 Car Wash will employ about 15 workers in Crown Point.

“A lot of thought and hard work went into this establishment, and it’s run by the owner himself,” he said. “I built this car wash so my car could run through it. I’m a car guy who used to work in car sales. I wouldn’t run anyone’s car through it if I wouldn’t run my own car through it.”

Closed

Chicago Heights-based Enzo’s Beef and Sausage restaurant expanded to 1120 U.S. 30 in Schererville in 2015, but has decided to refocus its efforts on its Illinois location.

“We decided that it was best for both the family and for the business to focus our time and energy on the original location,” the owners posted on Facebook.

As the name suggests, Enzo’s sells Italian beef and Italian sausage, as well as gyros, hot dogs and $1 slices of pizza. It used old family recipes and premium ingredients like top-quality pork butt and extra virgin olive oil.

Another Chicago Heights business may soon replace it in Schererville. A sign outside said Dozeli Pizzeria is coming soon.

Dozeli has been around for nearly three decades with locations in Chicago Heights and South Chicago Heights. It’s known for both thin-crust and deep-dish pizza, wings and deluxe sandwiches.

Opening

In other pizza news, and who doesn’t like pizza news, Domino’s is opening a new “pizza theater” restaurant where customers can watch the pizza being baked at 1918 165th St. in Hammond, its second in the city.

“We are dedicated to the Hammond area and are excited to better serve its residents,” said Hammond Domino’s franchise owner Jim Gronemann, who owns 15 other Domino’s stores in Indiana and Illinois. “We have a deeply experienced team of folks who live and work in Hammond, and they are eager to offer our delicious products, exceptional service and innovative ordering technology to the community.”

The Ann Arbor-based pizza company, the largest in the world based on retail sales, will celebrate its Dec. 3 opening by offering medium one-topping carryout pizzas for $3.99 each through Dec. 30, and by having a drawing on Dec. 24 for free pizza for a year.

The Hammond pizzeria also will offer 50 percent off to police officers, firefighters, first responders and members of the military on an ongoing basis.

The store is hiring and features a large lobby where customers can watch their food being prepared, an electronic screen for tracking carryout orders and a chalkboard “to allow customers to express their creativity or leave feedback for the store team members.”

For more information, visit www.dominos.com or call the pizzeria at 219-989-6550.

Opening

Big Lots relocated its Merrillville store to 3201 E. Lincoln Highway in Hobart and reopened with a new format, “which is part of a broader initiative to reposition the brand as a community retailer offering trustworthy value and friendly service,” the Columbus, Ohio-based retailer said in a press release.

The technology repair shop uBreakiFix has opened in Crown Point, where it will fix smartphones, tablets, computers, video game consoles and more.

The fast-growing company has 11 Indiana stores, including in Schererville, Michigan City and Portage. Franchisees Angelo and Alexandra Giannakopoulos established the new Crown Point location at 864 N. Superior Drive and hope to open more in the coming year.

“Crown Point has experienced incredible growth over the last few years, and we are excited to serve the community by providing a trusted place for tech repairs,” Angelo Giannakopoulos said. “We love being able to bring uBreakiFix to new communities because we truly believe in the mission of this company.”

The company now has more than 460 retail shops across North America and had made more than 4.5 million repairs on electronic devices, including of cracked screens and malfunctioning cameras. It offers same-day repair for products like the Samsung Galaxy and Google Pixle.

The pizzeria at 1191 E. Summit St. specialized in crispy thin-crust, offering a slice and pop for just $2.50 on weekdays. It was a small take-out and delivery place that also served big burgers and appetizers like mozzarella sticks.

“It’s the last day for Tim’s Pizza,” the owners posted on Facebook. “We will miss all of our customers; you were the best.”

Tim’s Pizza had been in business in Crown Point for nine years.

Opening

The North Carolina-based chain Family Dollar plans to open a new store at 1421 W. 25th Ave. in Gary this week.

“Family Dollar is pleased to invite customers to experience our great value and broad assortment of merchandise in the Gary community,” spokeswoman Heather Briganti said. “Our customers can rely on Family Dollar for everyday low prices on household products, food, beauty and essentials, seasonal merchandise, apparel and much more.”

A grand opening with giveaways, prizes, and a gift basket raffle will take place on Thursday. The first 50 customers in line on Saturday will receive a gift card.

The discount retailer has been in business for more than 55 years, and primarily serves urban and rural areas in 46 states.

Open

Bailey’s Mini Mart opened recently at 4802 Drummond St. in East Chicago.

“The city of East Chicago welcomes new small business in our community and wishes them much success,” the city said in a press release.

Bailey’s has a small kitchen and sells dollar tacos on Taco Tuesdays.

The convenience store is open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Saturday.

For more information call 219-354-8166

Business Ins and Outs

Times business reporter Joseph S. Pete provides the details on what’s coming and going in the Region retail and restaurant world.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Porto’s Peri Peri to open in Schererville; Venice Pizza, Which Wich and Griffith Meat Market close

The Villa Park Illinois-based restaurant is opening in a strip mall outside the Shops on Main shopping center at Main Street and Indianapolis Boulevard, just south of the Highland border.

According to the Regency Centers website, it will occupy 2,338 square feet and replace Meatheads, which closed in January after a four-year run.

Porto’s Peri Peri is named after the super-hot chili pepper used in cuisines in Portugal, India and Africa. In Swahili, peri peri means “pepper pepper,” or “strong pepper.”

The cuisine has been gaining popularity in the Chicago area, with Nando’s Peri Peri opening several locations in the city.

Porto’s Peri Peri serves up chili-marinated chicken in portions that range from one-fourth chicken to a whole chicken, as well as platters. Beyond its signature entree, the restaurant serves couscous salad, quinoa salad, falafel, hummus, burgers and vegetarian options like paneer rice, along with sides like rice, steamed vegetable and flame-grilled corn on the cob.

“Our all-natural, vegetarian-fed chicken is fresh, never frozen and marinated for a minimum of 24 hours,” Porto’s Peri Peri said on its website. “Our unique Peri Peri sauces are made from African birds eye chilis mixed with fresh herbs and spices. Being nut, gluten and MSG free, our sauces are suitable for all.”

Closed

The Venice Pizza restaurants at 1302 N. Main St. in Crown Point and 1233 Sheffield Ave. in Dyer have served their last slice of pie.

“It is with great sadness that Venice Pizza in Dyer is in fact closing its doors for good,” Venice Pizza posted on its Facebook page. “As much as we appreciate and love our valued customers due to unforeseen and unfortunate property issues, we can no longer serve the Dyer community at this time. We are extremely sorry this didn’t work out & for the abrupt closing. We thank all of our amazing customers! This isn’t a goodbye, this is a hope to see you again. In the meantime, our Hammond location is still there & we recommend them to all. Thank you.”

The pizzeria, known for its tavern-style square cut pizza and distinctive logo of a cartoonish mustachioed Italian chef, also delivered to parts of Munster, sold pizza by the slice and described itself as “a family tradition.”

Venice Pizza is a 30-year-old family-owned business that grew to three locations, but only the Hammond location at 6940 Kennedy Ave. remains.

That pizzeria delivers to Hammond, Highland, East Chicago and Munster. In addition to specialty pizzas like taco pizza, The Hawaiian and chicken and broccoli, the eatery also serves Italian beef, pasta, chicken wings, calzones, cheese fries and shrimp dinners.

Closed

Business Ins and Outs

Times business reporter Joseph S. Pete provides the details on what’s coming and going in the Region retail and restaurant world.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Country Pancake House opens in Merrillville, Vegas Cafe to reopen in Schererville, Carlo’s Pizza/Big Butt BBQ shutters in Cedar Lake

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Buttermilk Pancake House in moving into the old El Salto space at Ridge Road and Calumet Avenue in Munster.

Petros House of Pancakes and Restaurant served its final omelet in Merrillville this summer, but a new diner stepped in to fill the space in the Crossroads Plaza Shopping Center.

Country Pancake House is now slinging eggs, biscuits and gravy and coffee at 6190 Broadway in Merrillville. The 160-seat breakfast-and-lunch pancake house, which employs 11 workers, opened two weeks ago.

Owner Jose Perez has worked in restaurants for years after starting as a dishwasher, and always dreamed of opening his own place. Now his dream has become a reality.

“He worked really hard all his life from the ground up,” employee Kathy Taylor said. “After learning how to bus tables 30-some years ago, he worked really hard. He opened this restaurant through blood, sweat and tears.”

Perez took over Petros in August and has since been renovating the building.

“We worked to make it nicer inside with a pleasant, clean atmosphere,” Taylor said. “We try to give great service to the customers, who were glad to see the place come back. It is an entirely new entity with entirely new owners.”

Country Pancake House has kept many favorites on the menu for the regulars who continue to frequent it. It serves omelets, burgers, skillets, biscuits and gravy, grits, homemade rolls, chili, burgers, soups like stuffed pepper and chicken lemon rice and, of course, pancakes, offering “big, generous portions.”

A top seller has been the meat lover’s omelet with sausage, ham, bacon, green pepper, onion and cheese.

“He loves to make breakfast,” Taylor said of Perez. “We pride ourselves on customer service, good meals at an affordable price and being part of the neighborhood.”

Country Pancake House is open from 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. seven days a week.

For more information, call 219-888-9858 or find Country Pancake House on Facebook.

Coming soon

Also in pancake news, Buttermilk Pancake House is moving into the former El Salto space in the historic Old Town Hall at Ridge Road and Calumet Avenue in Munster. The new restaurant at 805 Ridge Road is now hiring and invites walk-in job applicants.

Closed

Sir Mix-a-Lot, who could not lie, likely would have liked Carlo’s Pizza/Big Butt BBQ in Cedar Lake, but not enough people in town did to keep it open.

The pizza and barbecue restaurant at 13231 Wicker Ave., whose logo featured a cartoonish pig with an ample posterior, closed without warning. Its phone number was disconnected, its website was down, and the owners could not be reached for comment.

Opened in 2013, Carlo’s Pizza/Big Butt BBQ was a family restaurant and sports bar that served barbecue styles from across the country, with a focus on South Side Chicago BBQ. It had an outdoor patio with cornhole games, and was known for its brisket and generous portions of ribs.

Reopening

Vegas Cafe ran out of luck and closed in Schererville, but a new owner likes the odds of its succeeding.

The restaurant at 800 Cedar Parkway, a rare independent in a stretch of Indianapolis Boulevard that’s heavily dominated by chains, opened in 2016. Vegas Cafe specialized in oven-baked, often open-faced sandwiches with Vegas-inspired names like the MGM Grand, Mirage, Venetian, Monte Carlo, Belagio, Excalibur and Flamingo.

Splashy Sin City decor lined the walls, and daily raffles and live musical acts gave diners in the Tri-Town a little taste of the Vegas experience.

The restaurant shuttered without explanation, but signs in the windows Thursday said it would reopen soon under new management.

Coming soon

Also in Vegas-themed restaurant news, the Vegas Baby Cafe is looking to open in the former Zuchez Restaurant and Bar at 211 N. Broad St. in Griffith.

Zuchez opened just north of downtown Griffith in 2017, aiming to be a nightclub with dancing, 64-ounce margaritas, a downtown date night-like restaurant and a breakfast joint serving biscuits and gravy. It lasted less than a year.

Business Ins and Outs

Times business reporter Joseph S. Pete provides the details on what’s coming and going in the Region retail and restaurant world.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Sav-A-Lot supermarket coming to South Haven, Bin 27 closes in Dyer, fitness studio and Freshii opening in Crown Point

The unincorporated community of South Haven in Porter County has been without a grocery store since Al’s Supermarket closed in spring of 2017, but that will soon change.

Save-A-Lot will take over about 18,500 square feet of the former Al’s space at 390 U.S. 6.

“We are really excited for Save-A-Lot to join the center. There has been a great need for a grocer in the area since the last tenant left and I fully expect the community to completely embrace them,” said Brett McDermott of Latitude Commercial, a commercial real estate firm in Schererville that represents tenants, landlords and developers across Northwest Indiana and the south suburbs.

Save-A-Lot is a national discount grocery chain with local locations in Merrillville, Hammond, Michigan City, and Kouts. The local franchisee will run the new South Haven store, which will offer fresh produce and meats sliced daily.

Opening

An F45 Training fitness studio and a Freshii fast-casual restaurant are coming to Broadway in Crown Point.

Freshii is a Canadian fast-casual chain most commonly located in urban centers. It sells fresh, healthy food like burritos, salads, wraps, and yogurt. The lunch-oriented restaurant has multiple locations in Chicago’s Loop.

F45 Training is a national gym chain with 1,300 locations in 36 countries. It offers 27 different 45-minute high-intensity interval training workout classes. Its workouts cycle through 4,000 different exercises so gym-goers don’t ever do the same workout twice, and their fitness doesn’t hit a plateau.

“This is a great first location in the area for F45,” said McDermott, who represented F45 in the lease transaction. “I really think the community will embrace the concept as we have nothing like it around us.”

Closed

Bin 27 Grille & Lounge, a fine dining restaurant that specialized in steaks and seafood, has served its last glass of wine. The restaurant at 275 Joliet St., Dyer, was named after its carefully curated selection of 27 wines.

Coming soon

Comcast plans to open a new Xfinity Store at 1918 165th St. in Hammond early next year.

“The stores are awesome places to visit and learn more about Xfinity products and services from the trained store staff,” said John Crowley, Comcast’s greater Chicago region senior vice president. “Visitors are welcome to come in and experience our products and services like they would at home.”

The store will sell Comcast services such as cable, internet, home security and mobile phone service. Visitors can use display iPads and other mobile devices to check out apps like the Xfinity Stream that lets people watch live TV on mobile devices when connected to wifi.

The store will be open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 12 to 5 p.m. Sunday.

Open

One of Comcast’s biggest competitors, AT&T, just opened a new store at 7917 Indianapolis Boulevard in Hammond.

“It’s great to have this new space in Hammond where you can walk right in and quickly learn about AT&T’s many tools and services that benefit our residents, businesses and tourists,” Hammond Mayor Thomas McDermott Jr. said. “Improving the livability of our community is very important to us, and we’re excited that AT&T shares in our enthusiasm about the city.”

The 3,500-square-foot store features many different screens displaying AT&T’s video, internet and wireless services. Customers can check out tablets, smartwatches and VR glasses.

“We’re delighted to be opening this new entertainment-focused retail store in Hammond,” said Thomas Monahan, AT&T vice president and general manager of the Great Lakes region. “The Hammond store is designed for an evolution in connected entertainment, and customers will be able to interact with content across many different screens.”

The AT&T store is open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.

The breakfast and lunch joint is in the old Zorba’s space at 3309 45th St. in Highland, on the Griffith border.

“We gutted it and put in new carpet, tile, floors and booths,” Champagne said. “We redid every booth, every chair in the place. We got granite and stainless steel in the kitchen. Everything back there is new.”

Overstuffed has several varieties of Philly cheesesteaks, a “fork and knife” chili cheese dog, a triple grilled cheese sandwich, a Reuben and a fried baloney deluxe sandwich with a thick steak-like slice of baloney that’s grilled, topped with bacon, American cheese, mayo and an over-easy egg, and served in Texas toast.

Breakfast and lunch items will be available all day at the diner, which employs 15 people. Champagne surveyed other local restaurants to ensure competitive prices, like $8.75 for skillets.

“We’ve got some pretty big portions,” he said. “We’re right in the middle of Griffith and Highland, and those communities have really been my focus. This place has been empty for a long time and we put a lot of money into it. We hope to bring back this strip mall.”

Champagne hopes to draw breakfast regulars as well as local high school students, who he hopes will drop by for milkshakes after school.

“We really tried to make our menu stand out,” he said. “The food and service will be top notch. Everything is homemade and we try to use as much local stuff as possible to keep it in the community.”

Overstuffed is open from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.

Meijer completed renovations to its big box store at 10138 Indianapolis Blvd. in Highland, and celebrated with a grand re-opening Sunday.

The Grand Rapids-based retailer added a drive-through for the pharmacy and a consultation room where people can meet with their pharmacist and get a wellness checkup or a flu shot.

The store added a sushi bar in the deli section where customers can get pre-made sushi trays, order sushi rolls by request from on-hand sushi chefs, or buy rolls for $4.99 on “Sushi Wednesdays.”

Meijer added a new pet department with premium pet food like Blue Buffalo, more than 200 pet treats and “a wide range of toys.” It expanded the Baby Department and the Apparel Department, adding a Skechers shop with more than 130 shoes and a Carter’s Shop for kids and babies.

The restaurant, known for its progressive American food, opened about a year and a half ago in a house at 225 S. Calumet Road. The Duneland eatery was known for craft cocktails, curated craft beers, an extensive wine list and wine pairing dinners. It drew its name from the Volstead Act that enforced Prohibition in the United States.

Volstead featured a creative menu that catered to the foodie set. Entrees included a bahn mi burger, milk-braised pork with crispy kale and pickled garlic and schnitzel with pickled raisins, gremolata, caramelized cauliflower and mushroom conserva.

Volstead was well reviewed, earning 4.7 out of a possible 5 stars from reviewers on Facebook. One reviewer from Chicago even claimed it had “the best burger in Chicagoland” and “gave Au Cheval a run for best burger.”

Spokeswoman Monica Jimenez Susoreny said Volstead was closing because chef and co-owner Dino Cocco was moving out of state. There are already plans afoot to open a new restaurant in the space next spring.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Ex-Colts player wants to open Stacked Pickle in Schererville, Quaker Steak and Lube returns, Gayety’s closed?

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Retired Indianapolis Colts player Gary Brackett aims to bring his Stacked Pickle restaurant chain to Schererville and other Region locations.

Former Indianapolis Colts linebacker Gary Brackett, who helped defeat the Bears in Super Bowl XLI, is looking to bring his Stacked Pickle restaurant chain to the Region.

The sports-themed restaurant that serves traditional American fare like burgers, wings, flatbread pizza and its namesake fried pickles has nine restaurants in the Indianapolis area and West Lafayette, and recently lined up franchisees in Houston, Orlando and Dayton, Ohio.

As part of an expansion across Indiana, Brackett is looking to open Stacked Pickles in Schererville, Merrillville and potentially other Region locations that could include Gary and Crown Point.

“The demographics there are very good,” Brackett said. “I think the concept would be a great fit.”

After retiring from nine seasons in the National Football League in 2011, Brackett started the Indianapolis-based Stacked Pickle casual dining restaurant and bar chain, which aims to have “a family-friendly neighborhood atmosphere” and compete with the likes of Buffalo Wild Wings and Buffalo Wings and Rings, which also has been soliciting franchisees in the Region. Popular dishes include a burger/wings combo and a pork tenderloin sandwich.

Stacked Pickle hopes to grow through franchising because franchisees tend to “have a better understanding of the neighborhood” and “a better commitment to the community,” Brackett said. Potential franchisees would have to invest $450,000 to $900,000 to open a Stacked Pickle location.

The restaurants are typically around 4,000 to 5,000 square feet, seating 150 diners and employing about 35 to 50 people. They could be located in a new building, an existing one or a strip mall.

“We’re the top sports bar here in Central Indiana,” Brackett said. “It’s going national. We’ve spent a lot of time on it. We’ve opened nine restaurants in eight years, and have it down so well that it’s turnkey.”

The Quaker Steak and Lube in Portage closed in May a few months after another chicken wing-focused restaurant, Hooters, opened next door in the AmeriPlex at the Port business park.

The past franchisee “decided to do something else for a living,” said Bruce Lane, vice president of operations for franchise services for Quaker Steak and Lube. But the corporate head office in Pennsylvania, which runs 50 of the gas station- and muscle car-themed casual dining restaurants nationally, decided the Portage location was too prime to just let close for good.

The company has since remodeled the 5,500-square-foot restaurant at 6245 Ameriplex Drive, and plans to reopen it Monday. It will feature a new interior and new food items.

“It will debut a new menu that’s coming out nationally,” Lane said. “It has new steaks, new burgers and new sauces for our wings. It’s highly elevated, more than the burgers and wings we’re known for and that are award-winning.”

When the restaurant first opened in the 1970s, it was a cook-your-own-steak place. It’s now owned by Travel Centers of America and is known for chicken wings coated with often extreme hot sauces like Triple Atomic, Super-Charged and Dusted Ghost Pepper. The Portage location opened about seven years ago just north of Interstate 94.

“It was a very popular area, a very successful area,” Lane said. “The people in the area are familiar with the brand.”

Quaker Steak and Lube did extensive renovations before reopening the restaurant as a corporate-run location.

“We have done almost a full scrape and rebuild, including the back of the house,” Lane said. “We have all new ceilings, a couple new walls, updated floors, new paint, new chairs, and a much more vibrant and modern building.”

Quaker Steak and Lube hired 150 workers, including several past employees. The restaurant plans to have car shows, concerts and events “outside its four walls” throughout the year.

Lane said it would also try to be more neighborly than the previous franchisee, who was notorious for having a parking lot attendant shoosh away cars trying to park in the restaurant’s lot to visit the nearby Starbucks, even at odd hours when the huge Quaker Steak and Lube lot was nearly empty.

“There’s plenty of parking for everyone,” Lane said.

The new management isn’t intimidated by the new Hooters eatery 300 yards away.

“Competition breeds excellence,” Lane said. “Quaker Steak and Lube and Hooters both have their customers, and this is adding another dining option for the clientele. It’s a longstanding restaurant that’s been here for a while. We’re thrilled to be back, and invite people to check out our new building and new menu.”

The restaurant will open at 4 p.m. Monday.

Quaker Steak and Lube will be open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and 11 a.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday.

A voicemail recording at the Lansing ice cream parlor and chocolate shop on Ridge Road in downtown Lansing said it was closed for remodeling. The owners did not respond to messages and the website was down, which is often not a good sign.

The beloved local chain has a long history dating back to 1920 when the chocolate shop opened in Chicago. The company filed for bankruptcy in 2014 but remained open after restructuring its debt.

Wise Guys Discount Liquors has opened a new store at 1601 S. Calumet Road in Chesterton.

The local chain, a spinoff of the WiseWay grocery stores, is known for wide and well-curated selections similar to Binny’s in Chicago. It’s also known for its frequent Wise Guy University classes educating consumers on wines, cocktails and other booze-related subjects. Wise Guys also has big-box stores in Hobart and Merrillville.

The company announced on Facebook that the Chesterton store, by Round the Clock restaurant near the intersection of Ind. 49 and County Road 1100, has “the same great selection and customer service you’ve come to expect from Wise Guys.” There’s an extensive array of craft beer and a “one-of-a-kind fine wine corner.”

The liquor store is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday, from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and from noon until 8 p.m. Sunday. For more information, call 219-728-1781.

Opening

Purdue University Northwest plans to open its new Indianapolis Boulevard Counseling Center in Hammond after a ribbon cutting with dignitaries at 1 p.m. Oct. 25.

The new off-campus facility is located at 7030 Indianapolis Blvd. in a building that previously housed a grocery and furniture store. It’s now home to Purdue Northwest’s Community Counseling Center and Marriage and Family Therapy Center.

Those offices were formerly located on 169th Street but closed so neighboring Korellis Roofing could expand its headquarters.

Open

La Cabana has moved into the old Indy Cafe space across from the South Shore Line station in East Chicago.

The restaurant at 5654 Indianapolis Blvd. serves up an array of traditional Mexican foods such as molettes, quesadillas, enchiladas, burritos and tacos that are served with rice and beans. Menudo soup is available on weekends, if you’re wondering how authentic it is.

La Cabana is open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, call 219-354-0075 or find La Cabana on Facebook.

Open

Aldi recently reopened its stores at 795 Deer Creek Drive in Schererville and at 5102 Franklin St. in Michigan City after extensive renovations.

The Germany-based discount supermarket chain, one of the largest grocers operating in the Region, has been pumping more than $180 million into more than 130 stores across Chicagoland, including Northwest Indiana. It’s investing more than $1.9 billion in its U.S. stores by 2020.

Expanding

Arbor View Animal Hospital, the only animal hospital in Northwest Indiana specializing in the care and treatment of exotic animals, has moved to a larger location at 244 West U.S. 6 in Valparaiso.

“Arbor View is the same hospital, but in a new building,” Arbor View Animal Hospital Office Manager Boddie Smith said. “We are so excited to share our brand new facility with our clients and the community. With our larger, updated hospital we are proud to be able to care for more pets than ever before, while maintaining the same high quality of care we have been giving for decades.”

In addition to exotic animals, the hospital treats, boards and grooms family pets.

The Green Witch Juice Bar and Cafe is bringing healthy, nutritious fare to downtown Highland with an array of juices, smoothies and trendy foods like avocado toast.

The 1,400-square-foot juicery at 2845 Highway Ave. in downtown Highland plans to celebrate its grand opening from 11:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. on Oct. 12 with raffles, live music and activities for kids.

Owners Verginiya Burgess and Tina Bilow sell juices like the top-selling “green detox” with cucumber, apple, spinach and lime, and smoothies including one with strawberry, spinach and yogurt. They have a juice menu but encourage customization.

“There’s no limit,” Burgess said. “You can combine as many vegetables and fruits as you like.”

The food menu is designed to appeal to vegans, vegetarians and carnivores alike. It includes a Caprese flatbread, tofu sandwiches, Greek and beet salads and “detox soup.”

“We have a senior menu and want to show people that they can eat healthily and organically without it being expensive,” Burgess said. “The main point is we want to promote natural, organic and healthy eating, and get people to incorporate it into their daily routine.”

The juice bar currently has about 18 to 20 seats for dining in.

“We’re working on a comfortable lounge where there can be different meetings, such as ladies’ night out,” Burgess said. “We plan to educate on healthy eating and can have detox seminars and classes there. We want events that will bring people together.”

There’s a retail section where The Green Witch sells oils, teas, cosmetics and “everything you need for a natural lifestyle.”

The business is named after a “naturalist, herbalist and wise woman.”

“She’s not considered a witch,” Burgess said. “It doesn’t have to do with witchcraft, and it’s not a Halloween store.”

The Green Witch is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday.

For more information, find The Green Witch on Facebook or Instagram.

Open

Red Wing Shoes, the Minnesota-based footwear company that made boots for U.S. soldiers in World War I and World War II, has opened at 7909 Indianapolis Blvd. in south Hammond, across from Cabela’s and Walmart.

The 1,600-square-foot store in a new strip mall employs four workers and sells Red Wing and Irish Setter boots that are manufactured in America. The shop also sells socks, gloves, belts, footbeds and other accessories.

Red Wing Shoes is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. weekdays, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and from noon until 5 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, call 219-803-2803.

A Great Clips and an AT&T store also have opened next to Red Wing Shoes in the new strip mall.

“It’s good to see businesses coming to and investing in Hammond,” McDermott said.

The AT&T cellphone and accessories store at 7917 Indianapolis Blvd. can be reached at 219-844-1848 and is open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.

The hair care salon at 7911 Indianapolis Blvd. can be reached at 219-554-6672 and is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. Great Clips, which also has nearby locations in Munster and Schererville, takes walk-ins.

Closing

The Annex boutique closes Saturday in downtown Highland, but will transition into an online business.

The store at 8638 Fourth St., which had been on Kennedy Avenue just south of downtown before relocating, sold fashion and locally made goods that included zines, bath balls and wallets.

“After tons of thinking and praying I’ve decided to close the shop,” owner Sarah Spezza wrote on Facebook. “I am so grateful for all the love and support I’ve received since opening the door two years ago. Just because the brick and mortar is gone doesn’t mean The Annex is. I plan on bringing a bigger online presence, including regular Facebook Live events, and you’ll definitely see me at the markets.”

Coming soon

Buona Beef plans to open its second Northwest Indiana location in Crown Point, said Aaron McDermott, president of Latitude Commercial, a major commercial real estate agency based in Schererville.

The Italian beef chain entered the Northwest Indiana market earlier this year by opening at 324 U.S. 41 in Schererville, its first restaurant outside of Illinois.

The fast-casual restaurant started in Berwyn 37 years ago and has since expanded throughout the Chicago area, including at Guaranteed Rate Field and Wrigley Field. It specializes in traditional Chicago fare such as Chicago dogs, Italian sausage, and pepper and egg sandwiches served on Fridays during Lent.

The new fast-food restaurant at 7343 Indianapolis Blvd. in the Woodmar neighborhood features slick design, a professional logo and an interior mural. The owner says it might be the flagship of a chain.

“This is our test site for this concept,” Jimmy Kollintzas said. “We’re definitely interested in taking this concept to other locations. We took a lot of time with the logo, graphics and design. You need good food, good service and good marketing.”

Kollintzas formerly ran Jimmy K’s Chicago Style Hot Dogs across the street from House of Pizza.

“We switched up the name because too many places are Jimmy’s or Johnny’s,” Kollintzas said. “The concept is quick service with dine-in, drive-through and delivery. We’ve got natural and hormone-free burgers, antibiotic-free hot dogs. Fast food will never be healthy, but we’re putting a modern spin on it.”

Street Shack, whose slogan is “Great American Street Food,” also plans to offer ice cream and milkshakes at the new location.

“There’s heavy traffic on Indianapolis, and Purdue Northwest is right there,” Kollintzas said. “The new sports complex is right up the street, and Hammond is doing great things. There’s some transient business from the Borman and a lot from the surrounding neighborhoods.”

Street Shack is open from 10:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 10:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday.

Relocated

Relish, the hot dog joint that brought classics like the Chicago dog and new-fangled fare like a barbecue bacon jam dog to downtown Griffith, has moved inside Lady’s Gourmet Popcorn at 118 N. Broad St.

“We’ve still got our same great menu and homemade soups,” Carly Haugh said. “We’ve still got the vegan dog. It’s an amazing one-stop shop for popcorn and hot dogs, with parking on Broad Street and in the back, which is a nice perk.”

Both businesses keep roughly the same hours, though the kitchen closes about 15 minutes before closing time.

Relish is open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday, and from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.

For more information, call 219-743-7858.

Closed

Angel Hair Cafe at 142 S. Broad St., just off the Erie Lackawanna Trail, has pedaled off into the sunset.

The sophisticated cafe, which shared a space with the popular Angel Hair Salon, is no more, but is expected to reopen with a new Mexican concept, possibly within a month.

Angel Hair Care was a sophisticated and eclectic cafe with fresh-pressed juices, smoothies, craft beer, vegan dishes and artisan sandwiches such as The White Walker. It kept sporadic hours and catered to cyclists on the trail.

Closed

C & R Stationery Store has closed after more than a half-century in downtown Griffith.

Founded in 1962, the store at 130 N. Broad St. sold stationery and supplies and did office machine repairs. It recently liquidated all of its inventory in an online auction.

The storefront is for sale by the owner, who can be reached at 574-870-1517.

Open

With little fanfare, El Salto has been drawing bigger and bigger crowds since replacing Coyote Cantina at 1090 U.S. 41 in Schererville, in the Boulevard Square Shopping Center that’s anchored by Planet Fitness.

The spot on the boulevard may seem snake-bitten to some, after cycling through Bagger Dave’s and Coyote Cantina in short order, but El Salto owner Robert Mendoza is optimistic the well-established El Salto brand can succeed there.

“There’s a lot of traffic, it’s very visible and there are busy establishments nearby,” he said. “Both the other restaurants were new to the area, and haven’t been established as long as the El Salto brand.”

The Schererville restaurant will have the same menu as the other El Salto locations and will seat about 140, plus 30 on an outdoor patio. It employs about 20 to 25 workers.

“Our patios have been popular,” Mendoza said. “When the weather’s nice, everyone wants to go outside. We’re planning to do live music on the weekends, and maybe even some mariachi on Sundays.”

The Schererville El Salto will be open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, from 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, with the bar open later on weekends.

Acclaimed chef Angela McCrovitz has been wowing diners for years with her lobster rolls, shrimp and grits, Po’boys and other seafood fare at Captain’s House, 6004 Miller Ave. in Gary’s Miller Beach neighborhood. But now the nautically themed restaurant might hit it big, expanding across the Midwest and perhaps eventually the country.

McCrovitz signed a franchising deal with Francorp, an Olympia Fields-based company that helped Jimmy John’s spread around the country. She’s initially looking for franchisees in Indiana, Illinois and Michigan, and there’s already interest in opening outposts of the Captain’s House in Cedar Lake and Whiting.

Franchisees will have the option of franchising a Captain’s House breakfast restaurant, a lunch restaurant, the lobster rolls, a food truck concept or all of the above. Her eatery has a “contemporary southern seafood” concept and features items like crab-stuffed chicken, Chesapeake crab cakes and Lobster pot pie.

Captain’s House initially will target markets like Naperville, Evanston and Indianapolis, as well as lakeside locations and college towns.

“We’re going to start regionally, but they think this could go big, fast,” McCrovitz said. “The flagship would be right here in Gary. I was born and raised in Gary, and came back, and it’s cool to think this could be my legacy.”

Opening

The 1920s-themed Palmetto Grove in Gary’s lakefront Miller neighborhood has been hosting wedding receptions, banquets and other special events for months, but it now is opening its doors to the general public.

The Great Gatsby-inspired banquet hall at 6132 Miller Ave. will host its first speakeasy event from 5 to 10 p.m. Oct. 20. Reservations are required and guests are encouraged to dress up in “Roaring ’20s” style.

Chef Angela McCrovitz hopes to open the 75-seat dining lounge and speakeasy-themed bar for dinner on Saturdays after the inaugural event.

“Normally I do black-tie events where it might be $35 a plate,” she said. “In this case, guests can order off a full menu, whether they just want a cocktail, an appetizer, salad, dessert or a full meal.”

For more information or to make reservations, call 219-239-2639.

Reopened

The El Salto Mexican Grill Express in Schererville reopened Thursday, about a week after a roof fire.

“It’s back to exactly how it was before,” owner Robert Mendoza said.

The quick-serve eatery at 820 U.S. 30, near the intersection of U.S. 30 and Indianapolis Boulevard, is modeled after Chipotle, allowing customers to choose exactly which fresh ingredients they would like in their burrito or tacos. Unlike the other sit-down El Salto restaurants, it caters mainly to the lunch crowd and those looking to pick up a quick dinner on the way home from work.

Transitioning

Tequila Restaurante was long a staple of dining and drinking on the Crown Point Courthouse Square before it closed last year and was replaced by Provecho Latin Provisions, an upscale tapas restaurant.

The Mexican restaurant reestablished itself this summer as The New Tequila Restaurante at Pheasant Valley Golf Course. Located at 3838 W. 141st Ave. in Crown Point, the restaurant brought back its celebrated margaritas and $2 tacos on Tuesdays. But the restaurant is no longer taking walk-in diners as its transitions to a new, unspecified business model.

For the time being, Tequila Restaurante only will accommodate large groups of 30 or more, with 48-hour advance notice. For more information, call 219-663-5000 or find the business on Facebook.

Open

Kids or those with a sweet tooth have a new reason to visit Chicago’s Navy Pier.

It’s Sugar, which claims to be the largest specialty candy retailer in the world, plans to open a 2,000-square-foot candy store at 600 E. Grand Ave. on Navy Pier. It will sell hundreds of confections, including all-marshmallow cereal, all pink Starbursts, and a “Taste of Chicago Box,” featuring candies that originated in Chicago, including Tootsie Rolls, Juicy Fruit, Charleston Chew and Baby Ruth.

“We are thrilled to finally bring our brand to Navy Pier, a centerpiece for Chicago’s diverse arts and cultural treasures, which is synonymous with old-world Chicago,” CEO and founder Jeff Rubin said. “We look forward to sharing the It’s Sugar experience with the community. This one-of-a-kind store is a truly unique destination filled with candy, gag gifts and fun novelty items for people of all ages.”

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Downtown Crown Point McDonald’s to reopen with self-order kiosks in November; Hammond tearing down Jefferson Hotel, getting new strip mall with Gloria Jean’s

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Hammond acquired and closed the Jefferson Hotel downtown after relocating all the residents. It will soon be razed.

One of the most heavily trafficked McDonald’s in the Region, in downtown Crown Point, is closed for renovations, but should reopen by the end of November with a whole new dining experience.

It’s getting self-order kiosks and table service.

“Beginning in August, the Crown Point McDonald’s restaurant located at 135 N. Main St. began construction to modernize and deliver a redesigned, elevated guest experience with new levels of choice, engagement and service, including a complete kitchen remodel,” McDonald’s owner/operator Jeffrey Templin said. “When the modernization is complete in November, guests will notice a modern look and feel with new designs and new ways of ordering, with self-order kiosks. Additionally, guests’ orders will be delivered to tables by crew members, allowing customers to relax and enjoy a more custom dining experience.”

The restaurant’s employees were moved to other McDonald’s until construction is complete.

“We can’t wait to share the new McDonald’s experience with Crown Point area guests and look forward to offering them a new way to dine at McDonald’s,” Templin said.

McDonald’s and its franchisees are investing $168 million in modernizing and building 270 restaurants across the state of Indiana this year and in 2019.

The Chicago-based company said diners can expect modernized dining rooms with new furniture and locally inspired decor, digital menu boards and expanded McCafe counters.

“This is an exciting time for McDonald’s and we’re proud to be investing nearly $168 million to provide a new experience, look and feel for guests at 270 McDonald’s locations across Indiana,” said David Sparks, an owner/operator and president of the Greater Indiana Operators Co-op. “We are also pleased that our modernization supports local architecture, engineering and construction jobs across the great state of Indiana.”

Closed

The Jefferson Hotel in downtown Hammond, a historic building that dates back to 1919, closed and is boarded up.

The rundown former Hotel Hammond mainly catered to transients and marginalized people in recent years, said David Mueller, the owner of Paul Henry’s Art Gallery across the street from the hotel.

“I worry about where they’ll go now,” he said.

The three-story building at 415 Sibley St. is not in pristine condition. The city of Hammond acquired it and has plans to tear it down, after having razed the former JCPenney department store building just west of it a few years ago.

“We acquired it at around the time we got the Hotel LaSalle and moved forward to relocate everyone,” Hammond Mayor Thomas McDermott Jr. said. “We can’t develop a business district if there are all these transients downtown. We got a lot of complaints from the business community about people standing around and just standing in front of buildings. It’s not conducive to the business environment we’re trying to create.”

Opening

A new strip mall is coming to south Hammond, on Indianapolis Boulevard across from Cabela’s and between an existing strip mall that includes Starbucks and the White Castle restaurant to the southeast.

A Gloria Jean’s coffee shop, AT&T store and chain barber shop plan to open in the new strip mall just off the Borman, McDermott said.

The timetable for construction was not immediately available.

Relocating

Illiana Music, a 9-year-old record store at 19528 Burnham Ave. in Lansing, plans to relocate to Hammond by the end of the month — at least temporarily.

The record shop, which sells vinyl records, CDs, T-shirts and stereo equipment, will move from its current 2,800-square-foot space in Lansing to a 4,000-square-foot space at 411 Conkey in Hammond.

It may be a temporary move as the owners are looking at buying a 10,000-square-foot building in Lynwood just south of the current location.

Open

A building that’s proven to be a revolving door for restaurants in recent years may finally have gotten some stability by way of a firmly established and beloved local chain.

The Mexican restaurant El Salto replaced Coyote Cantina at 1090 U.S. 41, Schererville. The location near a strip mall anchored by Planet Fitness was formerly been home to a Bagger Dave’s burger restaurant and tavern.

Coyote Cantina had aspired to serve “contemporary Latin cuisine,” while El Salto is more of a traditional sit-down Mexican restaurant that serves many favorites with sides of rice, refried beans and guacamole salads. El Salto also has restaurants in Valparaiso, Chesterton, Munster, Portage and Hobart.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: ‘One of Chicago’s best restaurants’ opens Munster location, Denny’s in Merrillville closes, Fresh to Order opens

Owners Christ Sirigas and Carri Sirigas said they were surprised by the craving in Munster for unique specialties.

“Farm-to-table is an old marker to put on a restaurant, but we try to be farm-fresh with everything,” Christ Sirigas said. “We get our pork from Legacy Farms in Indiana, our beef straight from Wisconsin and our eggs from Iowa. We do everything the right way and are transparent with where it’s from. We think that makes a difference in how it tastes.”

Harvest Room emphasizes freshness.

“We want meat where we know the farm it comes from, not from a thousand different cows. We want eggs from a couple days before, not that were preserved for two or three weeks. But we don’t want to hit anyone over the head with it,” he said. “The concept is to provide the best quality food around that tastes great. The food is just as good if they ask no questions. If they want more information, however, we’re happy to provide it.”

The 4,400-square-foot restaurant employs about 20 workers and seats 154. It has an all-cedar patio that seats an additional 36, and the owners plan to add a steel girder pergola later this year.

Harvest Room is looking to host corporate events and has private rooms that can accommodate 30 to 60 people. The owners eventually hope to add a dinner option. The restaurant is open from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, as well as for pop-up dinners and private events.

The Denny’s at U.S. 30 and Interstate 65 in Merrillville, a frequent haunt of high school students, interstate travelers and nearby office workers, has served its last Grand Slam breakfast.

The chain diner at 720 E 81st St. shuttered its location near the now-demolished Star Plaza Theatre and Radisson at Star Plaza hotel.

“Denny’s and its franchise partner have made the difficult decision to discontinue operations at its restaurant in Merrillville, Indiana,” a Denny’s spokeswoman said. “Denny’s and its franchisees regularly evaluate each of its restaurants to ensure they meet business objectives, and in this case it was determined that discontinuing operations is the best course for the restaurant at this location.”

The spokeswoman declined to answer additional questions.

Opening

El Salto, a local chain of sit-down Mexican restaurants, has put out billboards announcing it’s coming to Schererville.

The popular eatery recently relocated its Munster restaurant to Centennial Village. It also has locations in Portage, Chesterton, Valparaiso and Merrillville, as well as a Chipotle-like fast-casual El Salto Mexican Grill Express in a former Taco Bell at the intersection of U.S. 30 and Indianapolis Boulevard in Schererville.

Open

Fresh to Order — a Georgia-based chain that specializes in “fresh, fine food, made to order, fast” — has opened its first Northwest Indiana location in a new strip mall in Merrillville.

The restaurant is open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. For more information, visit www.freshtoorder.com.

Open

Epic Arts and Entertainment is now offering classes in dance, acting and modeling for children and adults in Space C-41 of the River Oaks Center in Calumet City.

The classes are taught by industry professionals for as little as $45 a month and can lead to opportunities for performances and agency representation. The school aspires to be the “Chicagoland area’s premier facility for performing arts training and entertainment industry services.”

Jordy N Jax BBQ signed a lease to open a new restaurant at 255 E. Morthland Drive, at the southwest corner of U.S. 30 and Washington Street in Valparaiso.

The restaurant will serve barbecue, beer and wine when it opens this fall, according to a press release by Latitude Commercial, the Schererville-based commercial real estate firm that brokered the deal. Renovations are underway.

“Jordy N Jax will serve the same great food as their Roselawn location with plenty of new menu items,” Latitude Commercial’s Antoy Miocic said. “This is a great addition to Valparaiso.”

Reopened

The German grocery chain Aldi has reopened its newly renovated stores in St. John and Calumet City.

The discount supermarket, known for its off-brand products, no-frills stores and shopping cart corrals that require a quarter to liberate a cart, reopened its store at 9921 Earl Drive in St. John.

“Our remodeled store layout will simplify the shopping experience for customers, so they can get out the door with everything they need,” said David Zalunardo, Valparaiso division vice president for ALDI. “We’re excited to unveil these changes in a great market like St. John, where we already have passionate, loyal customers.”

A new more modern design in the Tri-town location emphasizes fresh food, produce, dairy and baked goods.

Aldi has been investing $180 million in more than 130 stores throughout Northwest Indiana and greater Chicagoland, including the Calumet City location.

The supermarket had a grand opening for its Cal City store at 1490 Torrence Ave. on Thursday. The newly renovated store features natural lighting, environmentally-friendly building materials and open ceilings.

Aldi is undergoing aggressive expansion plans nationwide and intends to hire 25,000 more workers across the country by 2022.

Reopened

Salon Diva moved to a larger location at 658 S. Washington St. in Valparaiso after a fire rampaged through its former home in Thornapple Plaza strip mall on U.S. 30 last year, displacing half a dozen businesses.

“When it happened, clients still had color on their hair and foils on their heads,” owner Christy Pedersen said. “It started in the business right next door, and an employee came over and asked for a fire extinguisher. It was a hot mess.”

The 15-year-old Salon Diva hair salon moved in with Attitudes Hair Salon in Valparaiso, a building owner Todd Guyer eventually sold to Pedersen.

“He had been in business for longer than I have and we knew one another,” she said. “I’ve been told we’re both very much alike at being bosses. He has a good heart. I had nowhere to go with my staff of 20 to 25 and he was very generous and let us rent space.”

Salon Diva gained another 1,000 square feet that has helped it serve more customers. It recently renovated the building so it looks more like its old salon.

“It’s a nice story,” she said. “He gave us this opportunity when we had no other place to go. We were very lucky he had this place. It’s been a whirlwind of a year, but we’ve been able to gain some new employees, more square footage and some new clients. It’s been a blessing in disguise.”

The Rosebud Farm Stand in Chicago’s Riverdale neighborhood on the far South Side abruptly closed and was boarded up.

The produce market and meat shop stood at 525 E. 130th, not far north of the Calumet River, for generations.

No one answered the phone, and the owners could not be reached for comment.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Coyote Cantina, Frida’s, The Market at 119 close; bakery, day care and fitness studio opening

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Items for sale at Frida’s Cafe in Hammond, which has closed.

Times file photo

The artsy Frida’s Café, a cafe and art gallery in Hammond’s Hessville neighborhood named after the internationally renowned painter Frida Kahlo, has closed, but is open to the possibility of reopening at a new location at some point in the future.

“We are sorry that we are forced to close Frida’s Café at our Hessville location permanently,” the coffee shop and restaurant posted on its Facebook page. “We had hoped we could resolve the technical difficulties with the kitchen facilities but unfortunately that has not happened. We apologize for any inconveniences that these issues may have caused you. We are looking into our future possibilities and welcome your continued interest in our venue and events. If you would like to be notified about our progress, please feel free to join our Facebook and Instagram page.”

Owner Maria Cokys-Reyes moved the cafe to 6725 Kennedy Avenue in the White Ripple Gallery Hammond a few years ago, relocating it from downtown East Chicago. The coffee shop and restaurant was colorfully decorated with copies of Kahlo’s paintings, Day of the Dead skulls, and festive Mexican folk art.

It aimed to expose people to Mexican food beyond tacos and burritos, offering items like molletes bean and cheese bread and guajalotas, a torta from Mexico City that stuffed two tamales and various toppings into a bolillo roll, as well as a full range of coffee drinks.

Closed

Coyote Cantinain Schererville, a chef-driven restaurant that cooked up elevated, contemporary Mexican cuisine like one might find in Chicago, abruptly closed, but may just be tinkering with its concept.

“Coyote Cantina is currently closed,” a sign posted on the door said. “Please watch for exciting new changes in the near future! We apologize for any inconvenience and truly appreciate your patronage.”

Chef Dudley Nieto, who’s opened a number of restaurants such as Mezcalina, Adobo Grill and Chapuline in Chicago, and Bar Taco, Rosa Mexicano-Lincoln Center and Dos Caminos Park Avenue in New York City, came up with the concept for the Schererville restaurant, which served fine modern Latin cuisine and speciality tequila-based cocktails made with fresh fruits. It opened last year.

The sit-down restaurant had replaced the defunct Bagger Dave’s at 1090 U.S. 41 in a strip mall anchored by Planet Fitness.

Closing

The Market at 119 has been auctioning off inventory like rustic windmills, hanging olive buckets and round Santorini beach towels as it prepared to close its current location at 1600 119th St. Suite B in Whiting at 5 p.m. Saturday.

The owners of the boutique told customers on Facebook they plan to relocate, but don’t have a location picked out yet.

The family-owned business opened in downtown Whiting in 2017, selling shabby-chic farmhouse decor, country vintage, architectural salvage, restored home furnishings and unique home decor. It carried many locally made items like biscotti, bath bombs, toffee and handmade purses.

The studio at 14785 W. 101st Ave. specializes in group fitness class for women of all fitness levels, including cardio kickboxing, cardio bounce, high-intensity interval training, Pilates, and “inner vixen.”

“We’re excited to bring our new fitness experience to Dyer, and we encourage everyone to come check out the new club, meet our amazing staff, get a tour and see what She Fit is all about,” She Fit Member Engagement Manager Cheryl Nelson said.

A grand opening with hors d’oeuvres, refreshments and class demos will take place from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 1.

The Kiddie Academy plans to open an educational child care facility in Crown Point in early 2019, likely January or February.

The business offers full-time care, kindergarten before- and after-school care and educational summer camps to children between 6 weeks and 12 years.

“Although scheduled to open in January or February 2019, the owners are excited to introduce their well-trained, attentive staff to local area parents and some of the 36,224 children in Lake County,” spokeswoman Vitoria Perez said. “They look forward to assisting local children in developing the confidence and self-esteem necessary they need to meet the challenges of tomorrow.”

Coming soon

The bakery Nothing Bundt Cake is coming to Schererville’s Shops on Main shopping center, town manager Robert Volkmann said.

Nothing Bundt Cake, which has locations across the country, including many in the Chicago suburbs, will fill in the vacant space where Firehouse Subs used to be in a strip mall out by Indianapolis Boulevard, Volkmann said. The bakery specializes in bundt cakes made with real eggs, butter and cream cheese in flavors like chocolate chip, vanilla, red velvet, lemon, pecan praline and white chocolate raspberry.

Volkmann said the build-out would likely take some time, because the kitchen of the former sandwich shop would need to be transformed into a bakery.

Domino’s Pizza, the largest pizza chain worldwide, will keep the Noid at bay and deliver pizza in 30 minutes at three new Region locations.

The Ann Arbor, Michigan-based company is cooking up new restaurants at 7758 Broadway in Merrillville, 1918 165th St. in Hammond and in Chesterton.

The Merrillville location is expected to open in mid-September, dishing out its Hand Tossed, Handmade Pan, Brooklyn Style, Crunchy Thin, and Gluten Free pizzas.

“The store is 2,500 square feet large and features the pizza theater design, which is open-concept and features indoor seating as well as free Wi-Fi,” spokeswoman Danielle Bulger said. “The store will offer carryout and delivery.”

The new 3,000-square-foot Hammond pizzeria also features the pizza theater design, where people can watch cooks prepare their order. It will open around mid-October, offering both carryout and delivery of pizza, as well as oven-baked sandwiches, chicken, salads, and desserts.

“Both stores are owned by Jim Gronemann,” Bulger said. “He’s also opening another new Domino’s in Chesterton around April 2019.”

The chain, which became the top pizza seller in the world earlier this year, plans to hire about 30 people at each store.

Weary, haggard-eyed Crown Point commuters no longer have to struggle with caffeine withdrawal.

Starbucks has reopened its coffee shop at 930 N. Main St. after it was closed for nearly two weeks for renovations, disrupting many people’s daily routine. The refurbished coffee house now has an all-new look to go along with its high-octane espresso, cold brew and other coffee drinks.

Open

Quik Scripts, a local pharmacy chain with locations in Lansing and Griffith, has a prescription for growth that led it to open its latest location at 715 S. Dixie Highway in Beecher, Illinois.

A grand opening ribbon cutting of the family-owned pharmacy chain that promises to fill scripts in 20 minutes is planned Friday.

The new Beech pharmacy is open from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, call Quik Scripts at 708-231-6343 or find the pharmacy on Facebook.

Closing

The Dollar General at 8333 Indianapolis Boulevard in the Ultra Highland Plaza will soon sell its last packet of sponges or can of sardines for the $1 price that’s right on the sign.

“As part of a continual review on how we can best meet our customers’ needs, we made the decision to close our store on Indianapolis Blvd in Highland,” Dollar General spokeswoman Mary Kathryn Colbert said. “We plan to simply transfer all employees to nearby stores in the area, and we look forward to continuing to serve Highland residents with value and convenience at our other 21 store locations in Lake County.”

Closing

Fallas, a Los Angeles-based chain of discount stores with more than 350 locations nationwide, plans to shutter its store at 8315 Indianapolis Boulevard in Highland.

The clothing and household items store opened in the Ultra Highland Plaza in 2015. An employee said the official closing date was not yet known.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Once upon a Child, Verona Pizza, and Octave Grill reopen

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Once upon a Child reopened at a new location after a fire in Valparaiso.

Last June, a fire that started at Colonial Cleaners in Valparaiso ended up ravaging through the Thornapple Plaza strip mall on U.S. 30, displacing a half dozen businesses, including Salon Diva, Porter County Pet Clinic, and Once upon a Child.

After a year of picking up the pieces and working through an insurance claim, the children’s clothing resale shop Once upon a Child, a favorite with local parents and especially foster parents, has reopened at a new location about 1.3 miles east on the state highway.

“It was a total loss,” said Tina Williams, who owns the store with her sons Kevin Hutnick and Kris Williams. “Everything was smoke-damaged, burned or water damaged.”

An operator belt caught fire in Colonial Cleaners and the only employee in the establishment ran out after a fire broke out.

“It was devastating,” Williams said. “I was in Oklahoma and my son called and asked if I was sitting down and then told me the store’s on fire right now. Luckily, no one was hurt but it was still pretty debilitating.”

Once upon a Child served the Valparaiso community for nine years, but had to decide whether to renew the franchise for another 10 years.

Once upon a Child asked customers for donations so it could reopen, and 300 families turned out and filled bins to restock the inventory.

“I had the business phone transferred to my home thinking it would only be a short time until the building was reopened,” Williams said. “Although it took us nearly a full year, that phone never stopped ringing — even in the middle of the night. We really felt we were letting the community and foster families that we serve down. But the outpouring of support from the 300-plus families who generously helped us restock our store in the first two days after reopening was beyond comprehension. That solidified how grateful we are to be part of such a tight-knit community.”

Now the resale store has reopened at 201 E. Morthland Drive by the popular Viking Chili Bowl diner.

“The silver lining was finding this location,” she said. “It’s a better location that’s more visible and it’s right next to the Viking Chili Bowl, a good thriving business where the parking lot is always full.”

The new store is 6,000-square-feet and includes an on-site storage room where they can keep overstock like Halloween costumes or winter coats until they’re in season again. There’s all new inventory, a new design and new technology, where customers looking to sell used kids’ clothes enter their driver’s license number and get an automatic text message when the cash offer is ready.

“It’s been an incredible journey,” she said. “We learned what to do and what not to do to come back after such a devastating fire.”

Once upon a Child is open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 12 to 5 p.m. Sunday.

Verona Pizza VII, also forced to close because of Thornapple Plaza fire last June, reopened its doors at the end of July.

The pizzeria reopened at the same spot as before, at 1689 Morthland Dr. in Valparaiso.

“Big thanks to all of our customers, all who have donated, family and friends for your support in making this reopening happen,” Verona Pizza posted on its Facebook page. “The entire Verona staff welcomes you back with open arms.”

Verona Pizza VII, part of a local chain that also has locations in Hammond, Highland and Portage, offers pizza, pasta and sandwiches for dining in, delivery and carryout. The restaurant has an outdoor patio, live music and beer and wine.

Octave Grill, the popular hipstery Chesterton restaurant that specializes in gourmet Tallgrass Beef burgers and craft beer, has moved to a larger location at 137 S. Calumet Road in Chesterton, where people won’t have to wait outside on the sidewalk to get in and can now get carryout.

Owners Sylvia and Casey Petro moved the restaurant a block north in a former real estate office across from Thomas Centennial Park, where they hope some diners will choose to picnic during the warmer months.

The new restaurant has about 15 more seats in the dining room and a bar with eight seats where diners can wait for a table. There’s an additional beer tap to add to Octave’s carefully curated craft beer options and more kitcken space that will allow the restaurant to accommodate takeout orders.”

“The kitchen was really tiny,” Sylvia Petro said. “It has the same feel as the old space. Our customers have always hoped we’d get bigger.”

NWI Business Ins and Outs: El Salto, Octave Grill relocating

El Salto Mexican Restaurant and Cantina is the latest restaurant to open in Munster’s new Centennial Village development on Calumet Avenue and 45th Street, which has been emerging as a major dining hub in west Lake County.

The locally opened Mexican restaurant chain, which has six locations across Northwest Indiana, moved its “authentic, delicious Mexican cuisine” about a mile-and-half south down Calumet Avenue. El Salto, known for traditional Mexican fare like tacos, flauta, enchiladas, tostadas and quesadillas, had been located at the historic brick Old Town Hall at Calumet Avenue and Ridge Road in Munster for 13 years.

“It was time for us to move to a new location,” owner Robert Mendoza said. “It’s a new place and we figured Centennial Village would be the place to be. It’s a place where people are going to be going. It’s going to be a hangout.”

El Salto joins The Simple Greek, Kitara Surf & Turf & Sushi and the forthcoming Harvest Room in the new development, which also will eventually include residential units.

Its new restaurant at 9611 Calumet Ave. in Munster is about the same size as the previous location with about 150 to 160 seats. But El Salto added a patio with about 25 more seats outside, a private area that seats up to 30 and has a larger bar that seats about 15 to 18, and has 16 beers on tap instead of two.

“It has a big beautiful bar while the old place had a small tiny bar,” Mendoza said. “It’s very elegant. We plan to do a new drink menu with more margaritas, tequila drinks and martinis.”

The bar also will be open late on weekends and sometimes host live music after hours.

“We might make a few changes on the menu,” Mendoza said. “But it’s the same place with the same food. We expect our loyal customers will follow us and to gain a few more new customers.”

A grand opening is planned at 5 p.m. Aug. 10. There will be a mariachi band and food deals all day.

El Salto is closed on Monday and open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, from 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday.

Octave Grill, the beloved burger restaurant in Chesterton, temporarily closed while relocating to a new space at 105 S. Calumet Road.

Named after early aviation pioneer Octave Chanute, who flew a glider that inspired the Wright Brothers on the Indiana Dunes, the eatery serves up creative, gourmet burgers made with Tallgrass Beef from newscaster Bill Kurtis, whose company supplies premium grass-fed beef.

The chef-driven burgers are topped with high-end ingredients. The Figgy Piggy burger, for instance, features fig jam, capriole organic goat cheese, bacon and greens. The Jerk Store, a nod to “Seinfeld,” includes seared jerk-dredged chicken, giardiniera, Saxon smoked gouda, lemon aioli, greens, tomato and onion on a french roll.

A Greek restaurant in Hammond has gone from a sit-down eatery to a fast-casual place that specializes in the type of street food one could find in Athens.

The Stuffed Pepper at 7231 Indianapolis Blvd. is now Tzatziki Greek Street Food, a Chipotle-style restaurant where diners can customize pitas, salads and bowls with proteins like Greek-style gyros, Greek-American gyros, chicken gyros and salmon, and sauces like hummus, tirokafteri, htipiti and the namesake tzatziki cucumber sauce.

“We went from tableside service to fast-casual,” manager Andrew Holevas said. “It’s like when you walk into a Chipotle, it’s all in the counter in front of you. We have the type of gyros you’d find on the street of Athens, with pork, pork bellies, not the ground beef and lamb they serve in the states.”

Holevas said the restaurant was closed and reopened with the new concept to cut costs, since it wasn’t bringing in enough traffic to support a sit-down operation.

Tzatziki Greek Street Food still serves many of the old Stuffed Pepper favorites, including kebobs, lemon rice soup, moussaka, pastitsio, dolmades and spanakopita.

“Everything is homemade, which is the big different between us and a chain restaurant,” he said. “We have fresh-squeezed lemonade and fries that are hand-cut right in front of you and thrown into the deep fryer.”

Open

Coffee Cabin, the woodsy gourmet drive-through coffee shop that’s been caffeinating motorists on U.S. 30 in Schererville, is now going to give shoppers in Highland a jolt.

A Coffee Cabin has opened inside the Highland Meijer at 10138 Indianapolis Blvd..

Coffee Cabin offers an array of coffees, blended coffees, espresso drinks, teas, smoothies and fresh-baked pastries. It had plans to open as many as 15 Pacific Northwest-style drive-through coffee stands when the Schererville location first opened in 2015.

Reopened

ALDI has reopened in Merrillville after extensive renovations.

The no-frills discount German chain that makes customers use quarters to liberate shopping carts overhauled its store at 10 W. 81st Ave. ALDI is in the middle of spending $1.9 billion on renovations to 1,300 stores nationwide, including more than 130 stores in Chicago and Northwest Indiana by 2020.

“Our remodeled store layout will simplify the shopping experience for customers, so they can get out the door with everything they need,” said David Zalunardo, Valparaiso division vice president for ALDI. “We’re excited to unveil these changes in a great market like Merrillville, where we already have passionate, loyal customers.”

The new layout features open ceilings, natural light and environmentally friendly building materials, according to the retailer. The new design puts more emphasis on fresh food, produce, dairy and baked goods.

Kali Beauty aims to make the Region look its best after opening a new store in Schererville.

The family-owned retail chain, “where beauty gets done,” is located at 1036 U.S. 41 next to Planet Fitness in Schererville. Founder and CEO Rasem Isa hopes eventually to make the retailer, which offers a wide array of cosmetic products for hair, skin and nails, a household name.

The 8,600-square-foot store, which opened last, features The Beauty Bar, a full-service Paul Mitchell Focus salon owned by Schererville native Danette Gorelick.

Kali Beauty also has locations in Hammond and Lansing and prides itself on customer service and “having a run, positive atmosphere.”

“Kali Beauty caters to both women and men as well as ethnicities of all backgrounds, citing that each have unique needs,” the company said in a press release. “Each Kali Beauty retail store hosts a private full-service salon, featuring hair, skin and brow services. Kali Beauty offers their customers with a catalog of over 6,000 beauty products. Kali Beauty has what you need to live beautifully.”

A grand opening in Schererville is planned for 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Aug. 4. The new store is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.

Now you can satisfy your sweet tooth while shopping at a chic boutique in downtown Griffith.

Cute as a Cupcake! Cupcakery & Bake Shop in Merrillville has opened an express location inside the Bee & Me boutique at 100 S. Broad St. in Griffith.

The cupcakery offers 20 different types of cupcakes a day in the store at the corner of Broad and Main streets, as well as cupcake pops and “cutie cupcakes” served in mason jars so they can be more easily transported in a purse or shopping bag.

Michelle Wainwright founded the business in 2015 after she was laid off after 15 years in the pharmaceutical industry. She initially sold cupcakes at local farmers markets, then got a kiosk at the Southlake Mall before opening a standalone brick-and-mortar location at 2008 W. 81st Ave. in Merrillville and launching a food truck that travels to various Region festivals.

All the cupcakes are made from scratch, using recipes from Wainwright’s 91-year-old grandmother. Top sellers include red velvet, turtle, strawberry eclair and Dutch caramel apple.

“Our customers like that they’re always baked from scratch,” she said. “We have 30 different flavors at the main store, including vegan and gluten-free options because we understand people here have different lifestyles and dietary needs.”

The new express location in Griffith will have its own counter with pre-packaged cupcakes people could either sit and enjoy in seating next to a child’s play area or take home. It also will offer bottled water and pop.

“We want to try a store within a store, like a Starbucks inside a Target,” she said. “It’s a collaboration between two women business owners bringing two businesses to the same location in Griffith, where we can both hopefully take advantage of the same customer.”

Waitwright has been approached about franchising Cupcake! Cupcakery & Bake Shop and is looking to eventually expand.

“The economy is growing in Northwest Indiana, and demand is growing for cupcakes,” she said.

Cute as a Cupcake’s Griffith express store is open from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday. For more information, call 219-472-0858 or visit cuteasacupcake3.com.

Open

uBreakiFix opened at 4357 Franklin St. in Michigan City, its third Northwest Indiana location after Portage and Schererville.

As the name implies, the growing tech repair company fixes smartphones, tablets, game consoles, drones and even hoverboards. Its technicians fix cracked screens, broken cameras, software glitches and other technical problems.

Owners Angelo and Alexandra Giannakopoulos plan four more locations across Northwest Indiana and the south suburbs.

“Michigan City is a wonderful area with a great trade community,” Angelo Giannakopoulos said. “We recognized a tremendous need for professional, reliable tech repair in Michigan City and beyond, and we look forward to filling that gap by becoming the go-to tech repair resource for local businesses and consumers.”

uBreakiFix has been growing fast since it was founded in 2009 and ranked 18th on Entrepreneur’s Franchise 500 list.

“At uBreakiFix, our goal is to take the hassle of a broken device and create the most positive, convenient experience possible for our customers,” said Justin Wetherill, one of the founders. “We are a customer service company first, and a tech repair company second. As we expand into Michigan City, we look forward to becoming the trusted resource to keep consumers and businesses connected to the things and people who matter most.”

The Michigan City store is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 12 to 5 p.m. on Sunday. For more information, call 219-221-6696 or visit ubreakifix.com/locations/MichiganCity.

Smallcakes Cupcakery and Creamery, which has been featured on the Food Network and The View, plans to bring a wide array of cupcakes and ice cream flavors to Schererville, and perhaps later to Crown Point.

Local Gloria Jean’s franchisee Raed Naser, his wife Noor Musleh, his brother and their family plan to open a Smallcakes in early November next to the new Buona Beef in the Shoppes on the Boulevard strip mall on Indianapolis Boulevard in Schererville.

The 1,500-square-foot cupcakery and ice cream parlor at 336 Indianapolis Boulevard will seat 12 customers and employ at least seven people, who will come in as early as 3 a.m. to bake 18 different flavors of cupcakes and hand-make 14 different kinds of ice cream.

“There are never the exact same flavors, except for signature flavors like red velvet, peanut butter cup, wedding cake, birthday cake and chocolate fudge,” Raed Naser said. “The flavors are different every single day and we never sell leftovers — they’re all donated to charity.”

The franchise now has more than 200 locations worldwide, including one in Carmel and one in Orland Park. The Schererville location would be the second in Indiana. It will sell gourmet cupcakes for about $3.60 as well as “ice cream smashes” in which the cupcakes are served a la mode.

“Hopefully, sometime we’ll be able to open another store in Crown Point,” he said. “It has cupcakes and ice cream, so it’s not a seasonal business. There’s a dessert for everyone year round.”

Coming soon

Those who Live Mas or Think Outside the Bun can soon make a “run for the border” near the Indiana/Illinois state border.

A new Taco Bell is under construction on U.S. 30 just east of the McDonald’s restaurant at 915 Joliet St., not far from the Taco Bell that closed a few years ago at U.S. 30 and Indianapolis Boulevard in Schererville.

The California-based Tex-Mex chain known for its inexpensive approximation of Mexican food, which is especially popular with teenagers and people returning home from bars, is building a 2,053-square-foot eatery with a drive-through for $1.3 million. Dyer Building Clerk Maureen Decresenzo said the fast food restaurant will have a capacity of 40 seats and a patio that could seat another 12.

Opening

Pho Hoa + Jazen Tea will have a grand opening July 27 and 28 at 1101 N. Main St. in Crown Point.

The fast-casual Vietnamese street food restaurant will employ about 25 workers and seat 60 in its 5,000-square-foot eatery. For its grand opening it will offer buy-one-get-one-free pho soups and Jazen Tea fruit and milk teas, as well as give the first 1,000 customers coupons for free teas if they buy a regular pho soup in August.

The restaurant will be open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10 a.m. through 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday and from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Tequila and Tacos opens in Miller, Region’s first floating studio open in Schererville

A long-awaited Mexican restaurant is serving up tacos and pouring many varieties of tequila “less than five minutes from the beach” in Gary’s lakefront Miller neighborhood.

The straightforwardly named Tequila and Tacos, where you get exactly what’s advertised, opened at 642 S. Lake St., where the short-lived Brasserie coffee shop used to be. The Tequila and Tacos signage had been on the storefront for months and months before the restaurant finally threw open the doors to its tequila bar and taco kitchen.

Tequila and Tacos’ menu includes a variety of tacos, including steak, shrimp, salmon, jerk, barbacoa and vegetarian, as well as appetizers like guacamole, empanadas and wings. It carries a number of high-end tequilas and other liquors, and whips up specialty cocktails like the Tequila Oasis, the Matador, the Mexican Moscow Mule, the Sidecar and the Kentucky Sunrise.

Tequila and Tacos is open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday, from 12 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday and from 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, call 219-939-7136 or find it on Facebook.

Open

Say what you will about Northwest Indiana, it no longer lacks a flotation and sensory deprivation studio.

St. John resident Gloria Morris opened a Float Sixty — the sort of amenity that’s more commonly found in places like Chicago, Los Angeles or Nashville — at 322 Indianapolis Blvd. in Schererville in a professional complex across from Omni Health & Fitness back in March. Clients there chill out in shallow flotation tanks that are filled with 1,000 pounds of Epsom salts that give them buoyancy.

Float spas have caught on as a wellness concept in bigger cities, as they calm people and give them the opportunity to relax in a technologically overloaded age by reducing outside sensory stimulation as much as possible. People can completely unplug for an hour as they gently bob in about a foot of water, with or without light and music, depending on whether they find total darkness to be relaxing.

The Float Sixty float and cryotherapy studio is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, and reservations are strongly recommended.

The chain, which has been franchising since 1978, also recently opened a carryout and delivery-focused location at 332 Indianapolis Blvd. in Schererville.

Rosati’s also operates restaurants in Dyer, Hobart, Crown Point and on U.S. 30 in Schererville.

The new Cedar Lake and Schererville restaurants are open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday.

The Schererville location can be reached at 219-440-7943, and the Cedar Lake restaurant can be reached at 219-267-8700.

Open

Dollar General reopened its store at at 2828 Central Ave. in Lake Station after extensive renovations that include an updated layout and design.

The Tennessee-based company, which offers prices as low as $1 on food, housewares, cleaning supplies, health products and other sundries, expanded its frozen and refrigerated grocery options in Lake Station.

“Through our ongoing commitment to provide a pleasant shopping experience to our customers, we are excited to welcome the community to see our recently remodeled located in Lake Station,” said Dan Nieser, Dollar General’s senior vice president of real estate and store development. “We hope our customers enjoy the fresh layout and design, as well as the new product assortment including produce and expanded food assortments.”

The store is open from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. For more information, call 219-962-6173.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Kate Spade opens in Michigan City, The Cave and River Oaks Theaters razed

Kate Spade, the iconic fashion designer known for “It” handbags and fun, colorful, bright designs, tragically took her own life last month, but the retail giant she built is still growing nationwide.

A Kate Spade outlet store recently opened at the Lighthouse Place Premium Outlets in downtown Michigan City. The 2,800-square-foot store in the outdoor mall at 601 Wabash St. sells discounted handbags, clothing, accessories, jewelry, perfume, shoes, swimwear, glasses, gifts, stationary and home decor designed by the late fashion icon who who went from being a magazine editor to the creator of a global designer brand that became nearly ubiquitous in New York City.

Kate Spade items, such as the bags Vogue editor Anna Wintour said were impossible to walk a block in Manhattan without seeing, are known for being urbane, sophisticated, chic and affordable.

Spade sold her company, which operates more than 175 Kate Spade New York shops internationally, for $2.4 billion to Tapestry Inc. last year, before starting a new brand, Frances Valentine.

The Kate Spade store at 1660 Lighthouse Pl in Michigan City, is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, call 219.878.0879.

Opened

Dollar General relocated its Highland store on 45th Street from a strip mall to a newly constructed standalone building at 3325 45th St.

The Tennessee-based bargain retailer, where many, but not all, items are priced for $1, redesigned the Highland store so seasonal products are featured at the center of the stores, coolers are located up front, and departments are more easily recognized because of more visible signage.

“Dollar General is committed to delivering a pleasant shopping experience that includes a convenient location, a wide assortment of merchandise and great prices on quality products,” said Dan Nieser, Dollar General’s senior vice president of real estate and store development. “We hope our Highland customers will continue to enjoy shopping at Dollar General’s new location.”

The discount store sells an array of housewares, seasonal items, cleaning supplies, cloths and health and beauty products, as well as a limited selection of grocery items such as fruit juice, canned sardines, coffee and microwave dinners.

The Dollar General at 3325 45th St is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven days a week.

For more information, call 219.934.0748.

Razed

The demolition of the River Oaks Theaters in Calumet City, which started in mid-June, is completely done.

Nothing remains of the vintage movie theaters that date back to the 1960s, where many Region residents saw landmark movies like “Star Wars” and “Jaws.” They had been closed since 2006, and were deemed no longer viable.

Owner Namdar Realty Group/Mason Asset Management, which bought the River Oaks Center last year, has no immediate plans for redeveloping the site outside the mall, which has struggled from the loss of anchors in recent years.

Demolished

The Cave, a long-closed restaurant and lounge at Grant Street and Ridge Road in Gary, is no more.

The city demolished the building, which was badly damaged in a fire last year. Business suffered at the long-shuttered grill and pub in the 1990s because of road construction projects in the West Glen Park neighborhood, according to Times archives.

Dragobobs, which claims to make “the best shish kabobs and cevaps in Northwest Indiana and Chicagoland,” has set up shop in Cedar Lake, at a prime spot for grilling right across from the lake.

From the 1980s on, the Croatian family-owned business operated out of the Baltimore Food Store in Chicago’s Hegewisch neighborhood before selling the neighborhood market more than a decade ago.

“The name Dragobob came from the combination of my dad’s name Drago and the word shish kabobs shortened over the course of several years by our own customers,” owner Dennis Protega said. “Instead of asking for Drago’s shish kabobs they begin asking for Drago’s kebabs and then they started saying Drago’s bobs and hence the name was born.”

In recent years, Dragobobs has sold its marinated pork skewers at many Region summer festivals, Welch’s Stop & Shop and Doreen’s Pizza in Dyer and Jill Maries Market Coffee And Gelato in Crown Point. It’s also supplied cevapi to Serbian churches across the Region.

“We prefer to work with the smaller mom-and-pop places to maintain the integrity and quality of our product,” Protega said. “We want to make sure they’re done the real way with the right marinades and the right cuts of meat. We have a secret recipe of spices and blends both Mediterranean and Asian. We put 12-13 different marinades, special and dry rubs on it. When you bite into it, you have a party in your mouth. It’s flavors and combinations you’ve never tasted before.”

Dragobobs opened a production facility and meat market at 7502 Lakeshore Drive in Cedar Lake, the first storefront it will have had in nearly 14 years. Protega plans to grill meat outside for customers once or twice a month, the dates of which will be announced on Dragobobs’s Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

“We’ve got a permanent lakeview because they’re building a park across the street,” he said.

In addition to its namesake kabobs and cevaps, Dragobobs sells a number of sausages, including Italian sausage and a Polish garlic sausage.

Dragobobs will be open from 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday, and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. Eventually it will be open from Wednesday through Sunday.

Exotic Thai at 9628 Indianapolis Blvd. in Highland, formerly Peking House, has served its last plate of Pad Thai.

The Asian restaurant at Indianapolis and 45th Street was known for its serene environment, relaxing waterfall and many entree options that could be made vegan. But it was often visibly empty or had only a few diners. Online reviewers praised the portions, value and dishes like chicken satay and curry shrimp fried rice, but many complained the food was bland or that the chicken was dry.

The building has been under renovation, and Highland building inspector Ken Mika said a new restaurant was coming in.

“I believe it will be called the Kui Grill,” he said.

The owners were not immediately available for comment. Kui means “short ribs” in Korean, suggesting the spot on Highland’s main commercial drag that went from being a Chinese restaurant to a Thai restaurant will likely become a Korean restaurant.

Open

Blaze Car Wash has opened at at 4128 S. Franklin St. in Michigan City, next to Baymont Inn and Suites.

The state-of-the-art automated car wash is open 24 hours a day, with three monthly subscription plans. If the inside of your car also could use a cleaning, Blaze also offers free vacuums and free mat cleaning machines.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Gloria Jean’s coming to C.P.; new Griffith gyros joint replaces one that allegedly put cocaine in cheese stick order

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Gloria Jean’s Coffees store at Southlake Mall in Hobart. The chain plans to open a location in Crown Point early next year and six more across the Region.

Times file photo

A Gloria Jean’s coffee shop will caffeinate Crown Point early next year, and a new franchisee is looking to open as many as seven locations in Northwest Indiana and another 20 across greater Chicagoland.

Raed Naser signed a franchise agreement in December for the coffee shop chain, known for flavored coffees such as Blueberry Sunrise and Pistachio Nut Coffee, Chiller frozen coffee drinks, and espresso drinks with flavored syrups. The largely mall-based chain, which was founded in Chicago in 1979, has been looking to grow with standalone or strip mall locations with drive-throughs since it was acquired by Australia-based Retail Food Group.

Naser, his wife Noor Musleh, his brother and their family plan to open their first Northwest Indiana location at the end of a strip mall at 200 E. 109th Ave. at the corner of Broadway and 109th Avenue in Crown Point.

“Crown Point is growing,” he said. “It’s a good opportunity, and close to Interstate 65.”

He then plans to open six more locations across the Region.

“We’re looking at markets like Valparaiso, Schererville, Munster, Highland, Merrillville and St. John,” he said. “Customers like having options. Gloria Jean’s has more than 900 locations now, and the new owner is pushing the pedal to open more stores. Consumers like the flavored coffee, with the flavor coming from the beans and not syrup. It’s good quality coffee.”

Currently, the only Gloria Jean’s coffee shop in Northwest Indiana is in the Southlake Mall in Hobart. Naser said all the new locations would have drive-throughs.

Opened

Griffith Gyros at 105 N. Broad St. closed after its owner was charged in 2016 with punching an employee, knocking him to the floor, and threatening to shoot him in front of customers, police said.

It was replaced with Broad Street Gyros, which made international news last year after police arrested the owner after a customer allegedly found a bag of cocaine instead of the more traditional marinara sauce in a take-home order of cheese sticks, a story that was covered by news outlets as far away as England and New Zealand.

Broad Street Gyros is, of course, no more after allegedly serving a side of cocaine with its mozzarella sticks, since the Griffith Town Council quickly acted to revoke its business license, but a new gyros restaurant has opened in the spot in downtown Griffith.

Muncheez and More is open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 2 to 9 p.m. on Sunday.

For more information, call 219-301-7162.

Opened

Ollie’s Bargain Outlet is now selling “good stuff cheap” in LaPorte.

The Harrisburg, Pennsylvania-based discount retailer opened Wednesday at 69 1/2 Pine Lake Ave. in the Pine Lake Shopping Center next to Kroger.

Ollie’s Bargain Outlet, which has more than 270 locations nationwide, specializes in closeout merchandise, irregular items, discontinued products, liquidated goods, and overstock inventory that changes daily. It’s the kind of place where one might snap up random finds like a robotic vaccum, a drone, a waffle maker, a cookware set, patio furniture, rugs or a Himalayan salt lamp.

The LaPorte store is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday.

For more information, call (219) 380-5761.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Angelo’s Prime shutters all locations, Crown Point and Hammond ALDIs reopen

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Shown is a dining area at Angelo’s Prime, a boutique grocery store and restaurant in Schererville.

Jonathan Miano, The Times, file

Angelo’s, an institution for decades in the south suburbs that recently expanded to the Tri-Town, abruptly shuttered all its locations.

The phone number is disconnected, as are the numbers to the now-closed Angelo’s Fresh Markets in Flossmoor and Tinley Park.

The owners could not be reached for comment, but Angelo’s Prime manager Brian Brundage told The Times earlier this year that the Italian restaurant and boutique grocery had been struggling since the neighboring Ashley Homestore closed, which killed off 80 percent of the foot traffic.

He said the landlord refused to make concessions, charging the same amount for rent even though there was no longer an anchor tenant to draw customers to the shopping center.

“It’s tough for us as a family-owned business when the anchor tenant moves out of the plaza,” he said. “Their name was on the marquee.”

Angelo’s opened in Schererville last year. Its 30-seat restaurant, which catered mainly to a lunch crowd and closed by 7 p.m., served a meatball sandwich, a steak sandwich, pizza, a Wagyu burger on a brioche bun and “Death Penalty” garlic butter fries topped with bacon and melted cheese.

One of many old school taverns along Kennedy Avenue in downtown Hessville, Pioneer Tap was known for its raucous karaoke and as “the only country music bar in Hammond.” It frequently hosted live music, had a big dance floor and sold MGD bottles for just $2.

The McColly Bennet Commercial real estate firm is trying to sell the building at 6826 Kennedy Avenue.

For more information, call agent Peter Cappas at 219.545.9296.

Re-opened

German discount grocer ALDI has reopened stores at 845 N. Superior Drive in Crown Point and at 6518 Columbia Ave. in Hammond after extensive renovations.

ALDI, known for cheap, off-brand products and requiring customers to use a quarter to liberate shopping carts from the corral, is investing $1.6 billion to modernize 1,300 U.S. stores by 2020 as it makes a bid for more middle-class customers.

The chain plans to invested $180 million in more than 130 stores in Northwest Indiana and the greater Chicago area by 2020.

Fans of Vietnamese street food will soon have another place to slurp the savory noodle soup pho when a California-based chain opens soon just north of downtown Crown Point.

Pho Hoa + Jazen Tea hopes to open at 1101 N. Main St. in Crown Point by July 1 if gets all the necessary approvals from the city by then, Marketing & Sales Manager Thi Nguyen said.

The 35-year old restaurant operates more than 60 franchises worldwide, including in Canada, Indonesia, Korea, Philippines, Malaysia and Taiwan, and claims to be the largest Vietnamese fast-casual chain in the world. The Crown Point location will be its first eatery in the state of Indiana.

It’s a dual brand with a fast-casual restaurant on one side and a Starbucks-like tea shop on the other, she said. Jazen Tea specializes in freshly brewed jasmine tea drinks made with fresh fruit, such as the Berry Blossom strawberry raspberry tea with strawberry fruit bits; a green tea with strawberry, mango and pineapple bits; a Honey Delight honey jasmine green tea with chia seeds, strawberry fruit bits; aloe vera; and a mango mojito with minty lime mango peach tea with mango fruit bits.

Pho Hoa’s menu includes many variations on pho, a broth- and herb-based soup that can be ordered with steak, brisket, or meatballs. It also has vegetarian options, rice plates and vermicelli bowls with proteins like prawns and pork that is locally sourced whenever possible.

“When it comes to food and drinks, people are looking for healthier options to dine,” Nguyen said. “We’re health-conscious and make our food with local ingredients. It’s very healthy but also very flavorful.”

Pho Hoa has been growing across the country.

“The owner was a Vietnamese refugee,” she said. “Anybody can come here and live the American dream. There was an influx of refugees who came over, made an income, worked hard, and built their own wealth. The owner realized the American dream.”

Open

uBreakiFix, a chain of tech repair stores, has opened in Highland and plans to open another store in Michigan City soon.

uBreakiFix Schererville at 2305 Main St. Unit B2 in Highland, across from the Highland Grove Shopping Center right on the Schererville border, will fix smartphones, gaming consoles and other assorted gadgets and gizmos that people drop or that just suddenly stopped working one day.

The electronics repair company also opened a store in Portage earlier this year and is working to open a store at 4357 Franklin St. in Michigan City where people will be able to have cracked screens, broken charge ports or tablets dropped into the toilet fixed.

The Highland store is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. For more information, call 219-595-0037 or visit www.ubreakifix.com.

Reopened

Family Dollar has reopened its newly renovated dollar store at 2626 Central Ave. in Lake Station.

“Family Dollar is proud to be a part of the Lake Station community and we’re excited to welcome existing and new customers to our newly renovated store,” Family Dollar spokesperson Heather Briganti said. “In addition to providing everyday low prices and a broad assortment of merchandise, we have expanded our selection of food, beauty and essentials, household products, and seasonal items. Our renovated store should provide even greater value and convenience to our shoppers.”

The discount chain sells many, but not all, items for $1.

The Lake Station Family Dollar is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven days a week.

German immigrant Ernest Buck moved to Valparaiso in 1926, couldn’t find any jobs in his bricklayer trade and opened a shoe store to fill a void he saw in town.

The native of Bavaria originally worked as a shoemaker by the Valparaiso University campus, but moved downtown after getting bought out by a Gary mobster who wanted to open a pizzeria there.

The family ran Buck’s Shoe Repair in the Lincoln Flats building at 1 Napoleon St. from 1926 until 2009.

Ernest Buck’s grandson Steve Buck, an optometrist, restored and renovated the historic building, which he’s converted into a new restaurant that provides “innovative cuisine, impeccable service and top-notch wines, beers and spirits in a relaxed environment.”

“There’s a lot of history,” he said.

Buck opened the new restaurant Lincoln Flats with his friend Russ Adams, formerly of Strongbow Inn. They’ve brought back Strongbow’s popular turkey schnitzel using the original recipe, but adding a bed of spätzle to give it a more German twist.

The menu focuses on traditional American cuisine with twists, such as fish and chips with bluegill fillets and a spin on St. Elmo shrimp cocktail with avocado and wasabi.

“I’ve always been interested in wine and craft beer, and wanted to have a location that was casual and would have some unique food,” Buck said. “It’s not white tablecloth. It’s casual. We’ve tried to keep entrees between $9 and $20 to create a good value. Our portion sizes are a little larger, and we would love to see people share.”

Lincoln Flats has a wine list with $25 to $300 bottles and 16 craft beers on tap, including from 18th Street, New Oberpfalz and One Trick Pony. It also serves extensive spirits, including Hoosier bourbons such as Tanner’s Creek Bourbon and Old No. 55, made from Indiana sweet corn mash.

“We want to have fun with craft cocktails. They’re kind of whimsical,” Buck said. “We have a gimlet called the Gimmy Hendricks, an Endless Summer named after the old surfer movie with vodka that’s light and refreshing. Many have rock and roll themes. We take our food and wine seriously but not ourselves. We’re not a pretentious restaurant. We don’t do fine dining, we do great dining.”

The restaurant seats 72 people and will have an outdoor patio that will start out with about 32 seats so as not to strain the kitchen, but which could be expanded in the future.

Lincoln Flats is near Valparaiso’s downtown Central Park Plaza and has a liquor license that allows carryout, so Buck is looking at offering boxed lunches with half bottles of wine for picnics like those at Ravinia north of Chicago.

“Nobody else is doing it, and it would make us unique,” he said. “We also have this 21-foot-long, 50-inch-wide piece of black walnut for the bar that is magnificent. It’s a gorgeous piece of expoxied wood and this honeycomb was just left in there. You can look into the fissure and see dead bees to remind you it was a living organism.”

Valparaiso residents have embraced the restaurant since it opened near the end of January.

“If you’re looking for a casual environment with a great wine selection and innovative food, this is the place,” Buck said.

Lincoln Flats is open from 4 to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, and from 4 p.m. to 12 a.m. Friday and Saturday.

“We are trying to marry two different concepts,” said Carrie Kitaro, who co-owns the eater with her husband John Kitaro. “We have sushi, sashimi and maki rolls, and marry it to a steakhouse where you can get aged steak, filet mignon, ribeye or Japanese seared steak.”

They ran Kitaro in LeMont, Illinois for 10 years. They sold it as they prepared to open the new Munster location because they didn’t want the stress of running two eateries. They long had eyed a Northwest Indiana location because of a perceived lack of high-end Asian restaurants here.

“We finally found the perfect area,” she said. “It’s a great location, and there’s no other restaurant like this around. It’s like a trip to downtown Chicago with the finest sushi and steak. Both the wife and the husband can find something to enjoy. It has downtown style, it’s modern and pretty.”

The 4,000-square-foot restaurant at 9625 Calumet Ave. Suite A employs about 45 workers and has 140 seats, including at a bar and private dining room that can accommodate parties of up to 50. A seasonal patio will seat another 40.

Diners can watch sushi chefs work the knife at the sushi bar or see the woodfire grill blaze in the open kitchen.

“The interior is very modern and white collar,” Carrie Kitaro said. “It’s very modern and clean.”

The menu features many shareable items and a traditional selection of sushi and sashimi, along with specialty rolls like The Knucklehead with lobster, king crab, avocado, cucumber, spicy mayo and sweet soy, or the Bacon Bomb with shrimp tempura, bacon, avocado, blue cheese, tempura crunch, spicy mayo, sweet soy and a hint of sriracha. Both the Blackhawks and Bears have maki rolls named after them.

The many seafood items include a poke bowl, New England-style lobster roll, Chilean sea bass, pan-seared red grouper, Norwegian salmon, Alaskan King Crab legs as well as “turf” like bone-in pork chops and rack of lamb.

John Kitaro, the chef, has more than 30 years of experience, including in downtown Chicago, New York and Minnesota.

“I am very passionate about the cooking,” he said. “I love cooking and love people.”

Kitaro is open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday.

Gabrielle Pazour started selling her upcycled, repurposed and refinished furniture at local artisan markets, such as the Fetching Market and Hunt & Gather.

Her business took off so much she opened the brick and mortar boutique Aster + Gray in downtown Valparaiso in August. Its newly renovated home at 20 Indiana Ave. on the courthouse square includes reclaimed wood from historic barns in Porter County.

The shop sells goods handcrafted by more than 80 local artisans, including Regionwear, Mother Wilma’s Marshmallow Factory, Nomad.Breadth, The SpOiled Housewife, BUN’s Soapbox and many more.

“We focus on merchandise that’s handcrafted by artisans and locally made,” Pazour said. “There’s a wonderful, very supportive artisan culture. These are people who love what they do.”

Aster + Gray is open from noon to 4 p.m. Sunday, and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday. After Memorial Day, it plans to have extended hours of 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday and 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.

For more information, call 219-510-1114, visit www.asterandgray.com or find Aster + Gray on Facebook or Instagram.

Opened

Rosati’s has opened its second Schererville location at 332 Indianapolis Blvd. at the new Shoppes on the Boulevard development, next to McAlister’s Deli and Buona Beef.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Griffith lands new seafood restaurant, boutique, and an events space in the old downtown bank building

Bee & Me has taken over the former Renovar space at 100 S. Broad St. on the corner of Main and Broad streets in downtown Griffith.

The five-year-old boutique had been tucked away in an industrial park on the southeast side of town in Our Textile Hive, an industrial laundry, uniform, and creative design company founded by Breanne Stover. The Dominican University graduate and lifelong Indiana resident bought the Great Lakes Naval Academy’s laundry facility, moved it to Griffith, and handles industrial laundry for contractors at the steel mills and a growing number of clients.

“The boutique was just in a tiny room in the laundry business,” she said. “It’s nice to be in downtown Griffith now. There’s a lot more visibility and traffic.”

The boutique, which takes its name after Stover’s nickname, sells Magnolia home decor and clothes for women, men and children, including flame-resistant clothing for steel mills, school uniforms and spirit wear.

“We travel all over and look for different popular styles,” she said. “Our clothing is comfortable and reasonable.”

Bee & Me has a kids’ play area to keep children entertained while their parents shop, and plans to bring in a Cute as a Cupcake express shop similar to a Starbucks in a Target.

“The cupcakes will be in little cake boxes and will be packaged to go home,” Stover said. “There will also be drinks. We want it to be a hangout place for families. We’ll have the kid’s area and things like yoga.”

Bee & Me, which employs about 10 workers, is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday.

Stover is further expanding her growing business empire by buying the former Griffith State Bank across the street at the southeast corner of Main and Broad streets in downtown Griffith, which she’s transforming into an event space that will be called The Bankquet.

The stately Colonial Revival-style building, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, will host weddings, company functions and other events.

“I always loved that building and saw it was for sale,” she said. “My husband works in historic restoration.”

They plan to add a glass conservatory onto the building for baby showers and cocktail hours. They plans to work with local caterers once the events venue is up and running later this year.”

The historic brick and limestone-trimmed bank building at 101 E. Main St. was built in 1920 with a temple-like appearance, a terrazzo floor, pedimented entry, Doric columns, a barrel-vaulted ceiling, a raised stone portico in the center bay and friezes with engravings of money bags and quills and ledgers.

The original inhabitant, the Griffith State Bank, closed briefly during the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and then was shuttered for good in 1933 when it became insolvent during the depth of the Great Depression.

It became the Samuel B. Woods Branch of the Griffith Public Library, and served in that role until 1967. Most recently, it was home to a sign shop.

Renovations are underway, and Stove hopes to have The Bankquet open later this year.

Alexandra Hobby and her parents Joe and Cindy Drish are opening the beach-themed seafood restaurant at the site of the former Romano’s and Soprano’s at 840 S. Broad St. in Griffith.

“Our inspiration comes from 25 years of spending vacations as a family in Clearwater Beach, Florida,” Hobby said. “Our menu consists of all of our family favorites seafood items from Florida as well as sandwiches, specialty pizzas, Nashville Hot chicken, steaks, and salads.”

They’re working to transform the building into a beach vacation-themed oasis with murals of dolphins, sea turtles and other aquatic creatures. Shipwreck Bar & Grill will seat 180 diners and another 80 in a 2,000-square-foot patio with bags, fire pits, and a Tiki ring toss game. The bar and grill will often host solo acoustic acts on a music stage to add to the relaxed vibe.

“We will also have live entertainment for our guests to enjoy,” Hobby said. “We are so excited to offer our guests a relaxing and enjoyable experience while serving up some delicious meals. The vision for this restaurant came from a family and we truly want our guests to feel that.”

The patio will likely be open from April to September or October, and diners will be encouraged to eat there. It will have a selection of 20 craft beers on tap and put a focus on “fun drinks” like Hurricanes, Mai Tais, daiquiris, and margaritas.

“This corner needed to be brought back to life,” Hobby said. “We want people to feel like they’re on a little vacation in Northwest Indiana. We don’t want people to just come to enjoy a good meal. We want them to relax and enjoy some live music because we’re selling that experience.”

Chef Gale Wismiller, who most recently worked for a catering company in Chicago, is crafting a seafood menu that includes the grouper that’s popular in Florida, red snapper, mahi mahi fish tacos, blackened halibut, salmon and fish by the pound.” Everything will be made from scratch in the kitchen.

“We’re really excited to be part of Griffith. It’s been built up so much over the last few years,” Hobby said.

Shipwreck Bar & Grill is currently looking to hire around 50 workers.

For more information, call 219-513-8342.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Romano’s and Tequila Restaurante returning, Casa Vieja and Family Video bowing out

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Tequila Restaurante will return to a new location in Crown Point.

Times Staff

Romano’s, the Region legend known as “The Home of the Hoagie,” will soon make its triumphant return at a new location in Griffith.

The 70-year-old institution, which specializes in pizza, pasta and its celebrated Ham Hoagie, closed last year after the owner of its longtime home at Broad Street and 61st Avenue in Griffith sold the building.

Romano’s, which originally opened in Highland in 1948, has relocated to 1927 45th St. in the Griffland Plaza shopping center. Owner Myke Romano said he hopes to open as soon as May 15, but more work remains to be done.

The restaurant’s Ham Hoagie — Polish ham and secret pizza cheeses stuffed into a Vienna bun — was honored as an icon of Region cuisine in The Times’ 50 Dishes of the South Shore.

Reopening

Tequila Restaurante, a Mexican restaurant that once had locations in Crown Point, Dyer and Las Vegas, vowed it would return when its lease at 110 S. Main St. on the Courthouse Square in downtown Crown Point ended to make room for the tony new Provecho Latin Provisions and its high-end tapas plates.

Though such promises sometimes prove empty, Tequila is in fact coming back for another rodeo.

The restaurant posted on Facebook it would bring back the menu at Pheasant Valley Golf Course at 3838 W. 141st Ave. in Crown Point. The new location will seat 150 and another 20 at the bar, and have ample parking.

“Opening date will be posted soon,” Tequila Restaurante posted on Facebook. “Can’t wait to cheers with all our loyal customers.”

Tequila Restaurante was known for its margaritas, guacamole made table side and unorthodox items like Mexican crab cakes, cilantro-rita and Mexican-style lake perch bathed in a jalapeno/cilantro butter, which one online reviewer claimed was the best lake perch in the Region since Phil Smidt’s closed.

Closed?

Casa Vieja Mexican Grille, which moved into the space at 275 Joliet St. in Dyer that Tequila Restaurante vacated back in 2016, has apparently closed.

The eatery hasn’t been open for business for days, the shades are drawn, and no one answers the phone. The Facebook page hasn’t been updated since February. An employee at the neighboring Bin 27 restaurant said the sit-down grill and cantina was closed, but the owners could not be reached for comment.

Casa Vieja was well-reviewed online, ranking as the 15th most highly regarded restaurant in Dyer on Trip Advisor. It had a wide array of seafood entrees and was praised for its queso dip. A sample menu item was “Pedro’s Dinner,” a hefty meat-apalooza that pours its house specialty cheese sauce atop chicken, steak, shrimp, chorizo, bacon, bell pepper, tomatoes, grilled onions and pico de gallo.

In a streaming age when people can watch movies on-demand or on Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, or Cracked without ever getting up from the coach, it may have been some time since you last set foot in a video store.

So it shouldn’t be that surprising that the Family Video at 1208 E. 45th Ave. in Griffith is closing. It’s the one by the big yellow Griffith water tower and the Griffith/Black Oak branch of the Lake County Public Library.

Anyone who will miss the Glenview-based chain, which carries an array of DVDs and video games for rental and sale, can travel 2 miles west to the Highland store on 45th Street, which will remain open.

No explanation was given as to why it’s called Family Video and has an adult movie section.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Xfinity Store coming to Valpo, Highland to get upscale salon complex, St. John a boutique

Valparaiso residents will soon be able to venture to Xfinity and beyond, or at least have someone to complain to when their internet router keeps cutting out.

Comcast will open an Xfinity Store at 2710 LaPorte Ave. in Valparaiso in mid-to late May.

Customers can learn about or sign up for Xfinity services, including internet, cable, mobile and home security. The store will have iPads and other mobile devises to let people test out Xfinity apps that, for instance, let people watch up to 200 channels and stream as many as 40,000 on-demand programs anywhere.

“The stores are awesome places to visit and learn more about Xfinity products and services from the trained store staff,” said John Crowley, Comcast’s Greater Chicago Region senior vice president. “Visitors are welcome to come in and experience our products and services like they would at home.”

Current Comcast customers can go there to pay their monthly bills, or pick up and return equipment.

“We’re pleased that Valparaiso is getting a new Xfinity Store,” Valparaiso Mayor Jon Costas said. “Located within Valparaiso’s centrally located, dynamic retail scene, the new store will be able to serve thousands and thousands of existing Xfinity customers and attract new ones not just from Valparaiso, but from the surrounding communities as well.”

The store will be open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from 12 to 5 p.m. on Sunday.

Opening

My Salon Suite plans to open a 5,500-square-foot upscale beauty complex at 2715 Main St. in Highland later this year, where hair stylists and other salon professionals will be able to rent 29 salon suites.

“When we started looking at different franchising concepts, we knew we wanted something that would fit with our lifestyle, personalities, skills and interests — we found all of this with My Salon Suite,” franchisee Robert Gerick said. “We love that My Salon Suite allows us to operate our own business, have a flexible work-life balance and work directly with talented beauty professionals from our area. We’re looking forward to introducing the Highland community to the suite life.”

The fast-growing company, which was founded in 2010, now has about 50 salon complexes across North American, and aims to have 100 nationally by the end of this year.

“We empower beauty professionals to become salon entrepreneurs with their own suites, while providing them with all of the resources they need to success,” Gerick said. “Plus, for our members’ clients, we offer an environment to escape from the stresses of the day in a quiet, private setting where they are treated to an upscale salon experience like no other.”

Each suite features a full-length style station, styling chair, shampoo sink and color station, and the building will have “a state-of-the-art security system, luxurious bathrooms and an elegant lobby.”

“We opened our store in the industrial part of St. John near 95ate5 Brew Pub in September,” owner Abbey Sylvester said. “The name was our biggest obstacle. My mom and I were going back and forth on what to call it. One day we were reminiscing about my grandpa that passed away last January and how he grew up on a farm with goats. On Father’s Day they bought him two goats, he named them Frick and Frack. Looking in the thesaurus, another word for an antique is an old goat, and the light went off. We wanted to remember my grandpa by giving him a place in our new adventure and 2 Old Goats Market just fit.”

The store is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. For more information, call 219-351-5457.

Open

Meijer’s eagerly awaited 195,000-square-foot supercenter in the Porter’s Vale shopping center at Ind. 49 and Ind. 2 in Valparaiso, doesn’t open until May 24, but you can already pump gas outside.

Grand Rapids, Mich.-based Meijer opened the gas station on an outlot outside the superstore at 405 Porters Vale Blvd. Thursday. It will be open 24 hours a day offering, gas, diesel, propane, grab-and-go snacks, lottery tickets, cigarettes, phone cards and gift cards.

The growing retail chain now has 235 locations across the Midwest, including in Highland, Merrillville and Michigan City.

Closing

Aunt Sally’s, which fervent loyalists have described as the “best breakfast diner” and a place the Blues Brothers might have hung out at, closes at the end of the business day Sunday after 71 years.

The pancake house at 1215 Burnham Ave. in Calumet City served many lunch items like sandwiches, and of course breakfast all day. It had unique specials like a pizza omelette, a “conquistador taco” omelette and a Hawaiian omelette topped with pineapples and maraschino cherries.

The food was cheap, the booths were comfy, the coffee kept coming and ample sides like hash browns and pancakes left few hungry when they went up to the counter to pay the check.

It was usually always packed on weekends, and the crowds have only grown since the closure was announced on Facebook.

Owner Dennis Sidkey said he would consider opening another restaurant in the future, possibly in Indiana.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Relish brings hot dogs back to downtown Griffith, Bohemian Joe’s to close in Lansing

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Bohemian Joe’s has closed in Lansing.

Eloise Marie Valadez, The Times

Boz left a hot dog-shaped hole in downtown Griffith’s heart when it closed in 2013 after 27 years, when its owners decided it was time to finally retire.

But encased meats have made their triumphant return to Broad Street. Relish has opened at 223 N. Broad St., offering traditional favorites like Chicago dogs, chili-cheese dogs and ballpark dogs with mustard and grilled onions, as well as more modern twists like a vegan Chicago dog and a barbecue bacon jam dog made with jalapenos picked in-house.

“I honestly though we needed another hot dog place when Boz was gone,” said Carly Haugh, who owns the hot dog joint along with her mother, Patti Haugh, who also owns Lady’s Gourmet Popcorn downtown. “We went with Relish because it’s a popular hot dog topping and when somebody really enjoys something. It’s a good play on words.”

Relish uses all-beef Nathan’s hot dogs, Polish sausages made at Mi Tierra in town and vegan dogs made in the Space Revival kitchen just down the street.

“We live in an awesome town where it’s like a big family,” she said. “We want to support other businesses here.”

One of the most popular hot dogs so far is a grilled cheese dog made with American and cheddar cheeses and green onion on a garlic butter bun that’s toasted on the flat-top grill.

“The reception has been really great, especially from the vegan population,” she said. “It’s been years since there was a vegan Chicago dog.”

Relish is a small restaurant with a handful of seats that focuses on to-go orders. It also makes soups from scratch, and posts its soup offerings daily on its Facebook page at facebook.com/BroadStreetDogs/.

Relish is open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday and Friday, and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday.

For more information, find it on Facebook or call 219-293-6838.

Closing

Bohemian Joe’s, which replaced Popolano’s at 17940 Torrence Ave. in Lansing, is shuttering after a two-year run.

The restaurant served American fare such as blackened ribeye, honey lemon tilapia, a 14-ounce bone-in pork chop, burgers, salad entrees, pickle chips, beer nuggets pizzas and classic sandwiches like the Manhattan and Reuben in a slick-looking, newly renovated space. It got rave reviews, getting four stars out of five on both Yelp and Trip Advisor.

It will close on April 28 because the owners sold the building, which will be converted into an as-yet-unidentified new restaurant.

“It’s with mixed feelings that we are announcing that Bohemian Joe’s has been sold,” the owners posted on Facebook. “This really has been quite a journey for our family. Along the way we have put together an incredible staff and entertained wonderful people from which we take with us lifelong friends and memories. We have learned so much and have made our share of mistakes along the way. We apologize to anyone we disappointed for it was never for lack of trying or caring. I hope that we leave you with more positive memories than negative.”

“My wife Breanon is also a barber and will be joining the business with me,” Barsic said. “I guess this shop is my way of honoring my fathers’ 50-plus years in barbering by offering the best service possible in an area that is devoid of barber shops.”

Joe’s Barber Shop is open from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Wednesday, from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday, and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: St. John home decor store, The Simple Greek restaurant opening

A corporate refugee who wanted to strike out on her own started Sweet Home Indiana Home Decor and Gifts, which opens on April 28 at 8251 Wicker Ave. in St. John.

Lora Avecillas and her husband, John Matuska, decided to open the 1,200-square-foot home decor and gift shop in Lake Central Plaza across from Lake Central High School out of a love for visiting quaint shops and hunting for treasures while traveling.

Sweet Home Indiana carries many products in the country farmhouse, vintage, industrial and garden styles. It stocks jewelry, candles, stationery, clocks, handcrafted items, accent furniture and stuff for man caves, such as beer-infused soap. The shop has gifts for many occasions, including baby showers, weddings and holidays.

“I was in the corporate world for so long, and I just saw the opportunity for a home decor store in St. John with so many homes going up,” she said. “I was tired of working 14-hour days and thought about what my passion was. I like traveling and visiting cute little shops, and there was nothing like that here.”

She was inspired by stores like The Found Cottage outside Grand Rapids, Michigan, and the popular reality show “Fixer Upper,” which recently ended its run.

“Joanna Gaines is the reason we have a store,” she said.

Avecillas hopes eventually to expand the shop, hire more employees beyond family and get into online sales. For now, the focus is on providing as pleasant a shopping experience as possible.

“We’re very down-to-earth,” she said. “We want to make sure people have an experience. There’s a nice atmosphere. We want people to come stay awhile. We’ll have coffee, drinks, water, lemonade and cookies. We’ll have music, candles and a nice smell.”

She thinks such a store will thrive in St. John, where the population has grown by more than 12 percent since 2000 and has gotten an influx of new residents who have decamped from Illinois.

“St. John is a wonderful place,” he said. “We came out here, built out here and we loved it.”

Sweet Home Indiana is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday, and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.

For more information, find it on Facebook or call 219-627-3061.

Opening

The Simple Greek, a fast-casual Greek restaurant that lets customers customize pita or bowl orders, will open its long-awaited Munster location in the new Centennial Village shopping center Monday.

“It’s been an enormous amount of work and planning, however, being this close to launching this restaurant, we find that we’re most excited to finally have a great team of people ready to serve a great community of people,” owner Adam Robertson said.

The restaurant at 9611 Calumet Ave. in Munster offers gyros, chicken gyros, chicken or steak that can be topped with hummus, tzatziki, olive oil, feta and your choice of fresh vegetables. It also has traditional dessert options like baklava.

The Simple Greek will be open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. seven days a week.

U-Haul added two more Calumet Region dealerships in Gary and Chicago Heights.

Gary Discount Motors at 1429 W. 11th Ave. in Gary and Country Squire Foods at 113 W. Joe Orr Road in Chicago Heights opened dealerships that rent out U-Haul trucks and trailers.

They will let movers borrow U-Haul trucks and towing equipment, and purchase moving supplies and boxes. People with smartphones can use the service around the clock, picking up or returning a truck at any hour day or night.

The Gary dealership is open for normal business hours from 10 a.m. through 4:30 p.m. Monday to Friday, and 10 a.m. through 1 p.m. Saturday. The Chicago Heights location is open from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The owners posted on Facebook that they had sold the establishment, which had been open for 23 years.

No further details were available, and the pub’s phone number was disconnected. Michigan City Mayor Ron Meer said a developer hopes to redevelop the entire property to make way for new commercial businesses and residential units.

The dark and smoky bar at the north end of Michigan City’s Uptown Arts District was known for its fish and chips, burgers and other pub fare. It drew crowds for its open mic nights and to its outdoor patio in the summer, where diners and drinkers could feel a gentle lake breeze, and was, of course, a popular destination after the lakefront city’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade.

Opening

Uptown Cafe, the longtime coffee shop on Lincolnway near the Valparaiso University campus, opened the drive-through at its eagerly awaited Crown Point satellite location for a trial run last week.

At first, customers could only get drinks at the coffee shop at 10641 Broadway in Crown Point. The beloved local coffee shop sells several varieties of coffee, espresso drinks, handcrafted sodas and specialty drinks, such as a Matcha Libre matcha tea latte and an espresso drink that tastes like a cinnamon roll.

The Valparaiso cafe also serves a menu of light bites such as avocado toast, lox, hummus and caprese, but the Crown Point location is still ramping up operations.

Business opportunity

New owners have acquired the former Marquette Perk building at 900 N. Shelby St. in Gary’s lakefront Miller neighborhood, and hope to lease it to someone who will operate it as a coffee shop/bakery.

Zygmunt Dyracz and Lela Headd Dyrkacz, who own the acclaimed Chopin Theatre in Chicago’s trendy Wicker Park neighborhood, want to see the 1,400-square-foot building a few blocks from the beach become a community gathering place again. They moved from Chicago to Miller in search of some quiet after having kids.

“It’s in the heart of Miller Beach two blocks from the beach,” he said. “It used to be a place for people to mingle and talk to each other. We’d like it to be a community gathering place for people to meet and connect.”

Most recently, the property hosted Ben’s Bodacious Barbecue and Deli and the Wonderland Stained Glass studio, until the married couple that owned the businesses died in a murder-suicide last year.

The Dyrkaczs hope it could again be a breakfast spot for Chicago commuters and locals, and a place for evening dining and entertainment, possibly a piano bar or cabaret. They also would love to see any new business that opens there incorporate a small grocery section that would carry necessities like fresh baked bread, milk, eggs and wines for neighborhood residents.

Anyone who’s interested in the property should call 773-396-2875 or 773-814-5352.

Open

Kristine Johnson, a licensed cosmetologist with 20 years experience and the owner of Eyelashes Extensions by Kristine, a home-based studio in Griffith, launched Micropigmentation by K 2.0, which offers permanent cosmetic procedures that essentially tattoo makeup on lips or eyebrows.

“Why would you want permanent makeup?” she said. “Well, how much time would you save every morning if you didn’t fiddle with makeup? What if you are visually impaired, would it be easier for you each day? Shaky hands? Work out and sweat a lot? No problem, permanent makeup stays perfectly in place. There are many reasons why it could make your day better and easier.”

The business at 402 Miller St. is open by appointment only. Services include permanent eyebrows, eyeliner, microshading and tattoo lightening.

“I’m very passionate about what I do and I would love to share this passion with the community,” she said. “I pride myself on education and ongoing training.”

For more information, call 219-743-9077.

More on openings and closings in the Region from Joseph S. Pete

Times business reporter Joseph S. Pete provides the details on what’s coming and going in the Region retail and restaurant world.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Several new stores open at Southlake Mall

You can find better deals at Lighthouse Premium Outlets in Michigan City. The proposed 80- to 100-store outlet mall a developer wants to build near Interstate 65 in Crown Point likely would peel some traffic away.

Enclosed malls everywhere are not exactly at their height of popularity and cultural relevance, especially as department stores are folding across the country.

But Southlake Mall in Hobart remains the king of shopping in Northwest Indiana. The super-regional mall at U.S. 30 and Mississippi Street, the second largest in the state of Indiana, continues to attract new tenants.

Opened

Mr. Kay’s recently opened a shoe store in Southlake Mall, its second location. The footwear retailer has been located in River Oaks Center in Calumet City since 2007, and specializes in shoes, socks and accessories for larger customers. It’s known for a “large stock of hard-to-find sizes,” including for formal occasions.

On the lower level of the Southlake Mall near Sears, Fashion 5 opened a women’s clothing store that caters to younger customers. The retailer sells shirts, tops, blouses, cardigans, jackets, knit sweaters and fleece jackets in various styles, including casual, sporty and on-trend.

The growing chain says it lets customers “express themselves.” It has a few other Chicago area locations, including in the Woodfield Mall and Chicagoland Premium Outlets.

Opened

Kumar’s Jewelers also opened a new jewelry store in the mall. The locally owned business sells engagement rings, pearls, watches and jewelry make with silver, stainless steel, tungsten, titanium and contemporary metals.

The store offers financing and layaway, as well as engravings, jewelry and watch repairs, battery replacements and custom orders such as charms and dog tags.

Opened

About six months ago, Luxury Waist Training opened a health and beauty and women’s clothing store geared at slimming waste lines in the Southlake Mall.

The store sells shapewear such as cinchers, shapers, fajas and body wraps that are supposed to help female customers attain an hourglass shape.

“At Luxury, every woman deserves to look and feel her best everyday. Waist training/shape ware helps improve confidence and slims your waist line. It’s capable of really putting things in immediately,” the locally owned retailer says on its website. “It’s also going to help you activate muscle groups without any direct activity on your behalf — giving you work out like results throughout your whole day.”

Opened

Baseball Card Exchange, the Schererville-based sports card and collectibles store, opened an outpost on the second floor of the mall in August. The shop, which feels like a shrine to Chicago sports, sells baseball cards, signed jerseys, signed photos, signed footballs, and other sports collectibles for the casual fan, the hobbyist, the serious collector or the nephew you need to buy a birthday gift for.

Closed

There’s no more free tea in those little plastic cups for mall-goers, whether they pretended to be interested in purchasing a tea pot for a few seconds or just strode on.

The Teavana in Southlake Mall was one of the longest in the country to hold on, drawing visitors from as far as Missouri looking to stock up on its liquidated goods in its final days. But the tea shop finally folded along with all the others, as parent company Starbucks decided to close all 379 Teavana stores nationwide after acquiring the fancy loose leaf tea purveyor in 2012.

Opened

If you missed it in an earlier column, Oooh Wee Candy and Cereal Bar hopes to open in the Southlake Mall on April 20. The retailer, which also has a location at River Oaks Center in Calumet City, sells cereal by the bowl with 10 different types of milk and 25 topping options, as well as old school candy that can be purchased by the piece so it’s more affordable for kids.

Buona is opening its first Italian Beef restaurant outside of Illinois at 24 U.S. 41 in Schererville March 27, when it will be giving out Italian Beef sandwiches to anyone who’s in line before 10 a.m.

The fast-growing chain sells beef sandwiches dry, dipped, baptized or the “Buona Way,” with an extra spoonful of gravy, at more than 20 restaurants across Chicagoland. Its locations include concession stands at Guaranteed Rate Field, Soldier Field and at the outdoor beer garden for Big Ten graduates recently transplanted to Chicago on the North Side, where they play the song “Go, Cubs, Go,” expressing confidence that “the Cubs are gonna win today” after the game is already over, for whatever reason.

“This move is the first wave of spreading some Buona Beef love outside of Illinois,” owner Joe Buonavolanto Jr. said. “We’re excited to share Chicago’s original Italian beef sandwich with the residents of Schererville – made exactly like it was in 1930s Chicago, spiced just right and free of additives and preservatives.”

The restaurant in Schererville’s new Shoppes on the Boulevard will serve a wide-ranging menu that includes hot dogs, pizzas, salads, gravy-dipped Italian bread, and pepper and egg sandwiches on Fridays during Lent. The chain, a competitor of Zel’s, Pop’s and Enzo’s, potentially could meet some resistance in the union stronghold of Northwest Indiana after a few of the family owners were caught in viral videos spraying a garden hose at and cursing at union picketers who were protesting that a Buona restaurant was being built without union labor.

It’s finally time to make the doughnuts in south Munster, not far from the Dyer border.

Dunkin’ Donuts opened its second Munster location at 10415 Calumet Ave. The modern-looking 28-seat eatery has a drive-through and carries a wide array of fresh baked doughnuts, bagels, breakfast sandwiches and coffee drinks, including those with Girl Scout Cookie flavors like Thin Mint and Coconut Caramel.

The coffee shop/doughnut joint is in a newly built strip mall that has another 4,600 square feet of space available for rent.

Reopened

The popular Packman Pizzeria, first opened in 2014, was about to close in LaPorte after owners Don and Angie Kaczmarek died in a tragic car accident.

But the owners of Roberto’s Pizzeria at the Lighthouse Place Premium Outlets in Michigan City acquired the 48-seat restaurant at 612 Lincolnway and reopened it as Roberto’s Packman Pizzeria, closing their mall location to consolidate the two pizzerias into one.

“The kids were running it but they want to close the door and our lease was up,” said Sean Montgomery, who co-owns the pizza restaurant with Robert Becker. “They have loyal customers, 4,000 Facebook followers and deliver within 15 miles. It’s the only place in LaPorte that serves deep-dish and Chicago-style pizza with the dough on top.”

The restaurant also serves salads, chicken wings, oven-baked fries and subs, out of which the Italian beef and Philly Steak are the two most popular. It delivers as far away as Westville, Walkerton, New Carlisle and Michigan City.

Roberto’s Packman Pizzeria is open from noon to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 2 to 10 p.m. Sunday.

“Galactic” Greg Karras, the owner of the popular Galactic Greg’s and Cosmic Trading Post comic book shop at 1407 Lincolnway in Valparaiso, died of cancer at the age of 51, but his namesake store will remain open.

“Greg was all those things to us because of his kind heart,” Galactic Greg’s posted on Facebook. “He gave many of us a place to hang out, a place to meet others with similar interests long before the internet, and sometimes just an ear to listen to our problems. He introduced us to heroes, which I believe is the same as introducing someone to hope. … Galactic Greg’s will continue. We hope to make him proud as we continue to serve you the way he did.”

Karras opened the “pop culture superstore” in Valpo where people have gone for comics, role-playing games, vinyl records and more for more than 25 years. His passing was met with an outpouring of mourning from loyal customers.

“I’ve been getting my subscription comics from Greg ever since I was in elementary school. Even when I moved away for college, Greg continued boxing up my favorite comics and sending them to me every month — he has always been a source of joy and friendship in my life,” longtime customer David Higgins posted on Galactic Greg’s Facebook page. “I teach college classes on Graphic Novels now, and Greg helped shape the person who I am today. He actually supported my very first comics-related research project: When I was at Winfield Elementary School, he loaned me a stack of 1950s comics from his own personal collection so that I could compare them with my own comics (from the 80s) to determine whether comics were becoming more ‘corrupt or violent’ as a science fair project.

“I was a wide-eyed kid, and Greg saw my enthusiasm and wanted to support it. That’s the kind of person he was — he loved people, he encouraged joy and wonder in everyone around him, and he had a huge heart. He was a real-life superhero who made the world a better place in countless ways.”

Oooh Wee Candy and Cereal Bar serves up dozens of cereals and old school candy by the piece at the food court in River Oaks Center in Calumet City, and plans to open a location in the Southlake Mall in Hobart on April 20.

The fast-growing concept also has a location on Chicago’s South Side and is also expanding to Waukegan. There’s no booze but there is an actual bar that people can belly up to to eat all their favorite childhood cereal such as King Vitamin, Waffle Crisp and Franken Berry while watching television. Ice cold milk is poured from martini shakers.

People can satisfy their sweet tooth with 75 different types of cereal, 25 different toppings like fruit, honey and mini Oreo cookies, and 10 different types of milk, including almond, coconut, cashew and chocolate milk.

Owner Mark Walker saw a cereal bar in Dubai, and decided he wanted to open one here.

Any cereal you can imagine, hot or cold, is stocked on the shelves, and customers get to mix two if they feel like blending Coco Puffs with Lucky Charms or have a hankering with Captain Crunch with Apple Jacks. Customers can dine in or get it to go, with separate containers for cereal and milk.

They also can order cereal “cocktails” named after celebrities like the Nicki Minaj with Trix, Fruity Pebbles, Pop Rocks and strawberry milk.

Oooh Wee Candy and Cereal Bar also has more than 250 “old school” candies, including gummy bears, gummy worms and many nostalgic and hard-to-find items. It’s sold by the piece, not the pound, to make it more affordable for kids.

Kids also can pose for selfies with life-sized cutouts of Deadpool, Batman, Harley Quinn and other pop culture characters. Still, many of the customers are grown-ups.

“Our customer base is mostly adults who come in saying they remember that cereal from their childhood and can’t believe they still make it,” Walker said. “It’s nostalgic. People come for the good memories.”

Opened

2 Chicks, a high-end consignment shop, has opened at 2817 Jewett Ave. in downtown Highland.

“We sell a lot of eclectic items, including name brands,” said longtime Cargill employee Terri Yovkovich, who runs the store with her mom Shirley Bell. “There’s a lot for the younger generation, a lot of cool clothing, shoes, jewelry and vintage. It’s a lot of shabby chic style. We’ve got decor and fun and cool stuff.”

The 2,000-square-foot consignment shop also is home to Tiffany’s Tea Room at 2 Chicks, which serves a formal tea every afternoon Monday through Saturday and by appointment for showers on Sunday. Tea is ported in from the neighboring Sip 2 Coffeehouse, along with a three-tier stand with five finger sandwiches, five pastries, scones, cheese, crackers and apricot jam.

The tea room, an extension of the original Tiffany’s Tea Room in Crown Point, can accommodate parties of up to 30 and is geared toward luring female shoppers into the store.

“The women come in and they shop,” Yovkovich said.

2 Chicks sells items on consignment but also buys its own inventory, such as from an estate after a death in the family. Merchandise rotates frequently.

“I might eventually open another one,” Yovkovich said. “I’m originally from Calumet City but now live in Griffith. I might someday open one somewhere back in Cal City or near where I live in Griffith.

For more information, call 219-301-5588 or find 2 Chicks on Facebook.

To reserve a formal tea appointment, call 219-306-0980.

Closed

Starbucks just closed one of its first coffee shops to open in Northwest Indiana, 2381 E. 80th Ave. in Hobart just north of the Southlake Mall.

The Starbucks was in a strip mall with an Ulta and a since-closed American Bagel Company. It dated back to the 1990s and was a product of a different age, lacking a drive-through that is now standard at Starbucks.

The Seattle-based coffee giant, which has lately been pushing white espresso on its notoriously loyal customer base, opened a new location not far down U.S. 30 in Merrillville last year after being forced to shutter its extremely popular coffee shop inside the Radisson at Star Plaza, which was torn down to make way for a redevelopment product.

Those jonesing for a Frappuccino or a cold brew don’t have to travel far to get their fix — Starbucks still has two other location by the Southlake Mall, one on Mississippi Street and another inside Target.

Relocated

Highland Board Shop is now HBS now that it’s no longer in Highland.

The skateboarding store, which promises “West Coast Vibes and Steezy Rides,” shuttered its location at 8808 Kennedy Ave. in downtown Highland. The 3-year-old business moved to 132 N. Broad St. in downtown Griffith.

The shop sells skateboarding gear, apparel and accessories. It encourages its customers, who skew younger, to “shred the gnar.”

HBS is open from 12 to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and from 12 to 5 p.m. Sunday.

Relocated

The Annex also vacated the same two-story building in downtown Highland that it shared with Highland Board Shop.

The funky boutique, which stocks many locally sourced and trendy items, has relocated to 8638 4th St. in Highland. It celebrated its grand reopening Friday.

Anticipation has been mounting for Provecho Latin Provisions since Tequila Restaurante closed on the courthouse square in downtown Crown Point last year.

New owner and chef Chris Pappas, whose family owns several restaurants in Crown Point, has been transforming the prime space at 110 S. Main St. into an upscale Latin restaurant with tastes of Spain and South America. The wait is over.

“GRAND OPENING!” Provecho Latin Provisions posted on social media. “Months of dreaming, planning, hard work, and collaboration have come together to bring you Provecho Latin Provisions. Our grand opening will take place Tuesday, March 13th!”

The restaurant will serve traditional tapas dishes like grilled octopus and baked goat cheese in tomato sauce, as well as dishes like corn poblano soup and “Cuban-inspired empanadas with ribeye, green plantain, oaxaca cheese and roasted poblano.” Many ingredients will be sourced from local providers such as Five Hands Farm in Lowell.

Provecho Latin Provisions takes its name from the Spanish phrase buen provecho, which roughly translates to bon appetite. It will serve cocktails made with seasonal fresh fruits that are cold-pressed daily, as well as house-made orgeat, falernum, allspice and cinnamon syrups.

Schererville-based Latitude Commercial Real Estate is bringing a restaurant chain owned by KISS frontmen Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley to the south suburbs.

Rock & Brews, which combines comfort food, a wide selection of craft beers and a “family-friendly rock ‘n’ roll experience,” plans to open at the corner of LaGrange Road and 143rd Street in the Orland Park Crossing Lifestyle Center in Orland Park, and at the corner of Cicero Avenue and 111th Street in the Stony Creek Promenade in Oak Lawn.

The Rock & Brews menu includes “creative spins” on burgers, wings, pizza, salads, as well as an extensive tap list that is “always rotating to feature the latest and greatest in craft brew.”

“We are very excited to see the concept start their roots in these two locations and see the brand expand throughout Chicago in the future,” Latitute Commercial Real Estate President Aaron McDermott said. “We are currently exploring locations for an additional three to four sites within the next two years.”

Opening

Poppy & Pleets Boutique opened at 9735 Fran Lin Parkway in Munster. The store sells trendy women’s clothes, shoes, handbags, jewelry and accessories that are also affordably priced in a chic space with a quote by Coco Chanel: “The best color in the world is the one that looks good on you.”

Now Poppy & Pleets owner Meghan Edens plans to open a second location at 7958 U.S. 41 in St. John. A soft opening will take place from 1 to 4 p.m. on Sunday, March 25.

Its LaPorte store will be located by Kroger supermarket in the Pine Lake Shopping Center.

The 36-year-old company, which has more than 270 locations and more than 5,000 employees across the country, offers customers a treasure hunt amid ever-changing merchandise with “witty, humorous in-store signage.” The brand’s marketing prominently features the bucktoothed, leather-skinned, white-haired, wide-lapelled Ollie character.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Dairy Belle and Theo’s expanding, while Jansens closes

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Dairy Belle in Hammond. The popular ice cream stand is expanding to Cedar Lake.

Dairy Belle, a walk-up ice cream stand in Hammond since 1950, has been called the best ice cream in the Region.

Two years ago, it spread its beloved cones, shakes, malts and ice cream treats south to a former Dairy Queen at 2034 Austin Ave. in Schererville. Now Dairy Belle is bringing its sweet treats, including the googly-eyed Monster and Poodle ice cream cones, to Cedar Lake.

The ice cream restaurant, which serves a wide array of sundaes, flurries and waffle cones, announced on Facebook it purchased Sundaes on the Lake, a similarly old school walk-up ice cream stand at 13134 Lake Shore Drive on the shore of Cedar Lake.

A staple of childhood for generations of Region residents, Dairy Belle is so popular it sells T-shirts.

“Prepare to be fat and proud. I’ve never known anyone to try Dairy Belle and not become a repeat user,” one Yelp reviewer wrote. “The ice cream here is to die for. The shakes and malts are equivalent to what I imagine to be nectar of the gods.”

Re-opening

The longstanding Dick’s Restaurant and Bar recently closed at 10808 Wicker Ave. on the south edge of St. John.

But it’s been purchased by Theo’s Steaks & Seafood, the urbane, sophisticated chophouse at 9144 Indianapolis Blvd. in Highland that’s known for steaks, seafood and cocktails in an elegant setting. Theo’s plans to keep the Dick’s name for now, but is freshening up the place and the menu.

“We are excited about adding Dick’s to our restaurant family,” Theo’s owner Peter Klideris said. “Our family is thrilled to bring our love of food and serving our community to the people of St. John. We plan to keep the name for right now, but will be updating the menu to feature a variety of steaks and seafood.”

Theo’s also is extensively renovating the restaurant, which had drawn complaints for its dated decor. One online reviewer had complained last year it looked “like an old folks’ home … in the 1970s.”

“We are working around the clock to enhance the building cosmetically to give it more of a modern feel,” Klideris said. “The restaurant will also include a beautiful private room that will accommodate up to 120 guests. Perfect for any occasion. Stay tuned for more exciting plans!”

Opening

Two more diners are coming to Broadway in Merrillville.

The long-abandoned Broadway Cafe at 7454 Broadway is being reborn as Cafe Stelios.

Xioties Properties, which owned the family-style Delta Restaurant a fifth of a mile north, hopes to open in June a 137-seat restaurant in the 4,300-square-foot building, after an extensive renovation of the vintage Broadway Cafe, which had a 1950s look.

Broadway Cafe was shuttered so long that burglars looted all the remaining shelves and appliances in 2010. The new Cafe Stelios would be open from 6 a.m. to midnight.

And new owners plan to reopen the former Delta diner at 7600 Broadway as the Breakfast Society, a pancake house open for breakfast and lunch that would seat 94 diners.

But the longstanding produce stand and garden center at 8190 E. Ridge Road has closed after more than six decades.

“It was a very, very hard decision and with a heavy heart and lot of tears I must tell you that we have closed our store permanently,” owner Jack Feurgye posted on Jansens’ Facebook page. “Most of you were not just customers, you were friends and always will be friends. It has been a pleasure helping and talking to you. I hope to see all of you at some point. I want to wish everyone health and happiness in the future.”

Unlike many produce stands in the area, Jansens Fruit Market was open year-round, offering pumpkins, decorative Indian corn, Christmas trees, wreathes and gift baskets during the less fruitful fall and winter seasons. It had a greenhouse filled with perennials, hanging baskets and tropical flowering plants.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Royale with Cheese brings hipster burgers to Michigan City

In one of the more famous, oft-quoted lines of dialogue in “Pulp Fiction,” an exchange that helped cement Quentin Tarantino as a virtuoso screenwriter and cinematic auteur, the hitmen Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield talked about Vincent’s recent trip to Paris.

“And you know what they call a Quarter Pounder with Cheese in Paris?” asked Vincent, played by John Travolta.

“They don’t call it a Quarter Pounder with cheese?” asked Jules, played by Samuel L. Jackson.

“No man, they got the metric system. They wouldn’t know what a Quarter Pounder is.”

“Then what do they call it?”

“They call it a Royale with cheese.”

Royale with Cheese is the name of a hip new burger restaurant at 827 Franklin St. in downtown Michigan City that references the classic movie on its Facebook page. It’s decorated with modern art, chalkboard menus, Edison lighting, exposed ducts and a deconstructed motorcycle that’s hung up on the wall. There’s a pop machine pouring Jones Soda, which is made in Seattle with pure cane sugar, the slogan “because big soda sucks,” and features idiosyncratic flavors like Green Apple, Blue Bubble Gum, Fufu Berry, Strawberry Lime and Bacon.

The restaurant serves big beefy burgers with weekly specials — dubbed Bob’s Burgers after the cult TV show — like the “Jack-O-Lentil” with goat cheese, baby spinach and lentils; “Hit me with your Best Shallot,” with shallots, arugula and goat cheese; the “Sweaty Palms Burger” with Parmesan, spicy hearts of palm and artichoke Tapenade; and the “If Looks Could Kale Burger” with Gruyere cheese, rosemary tomato orzo and, of course, kale.

The menu includes salads, sandwiches, elote it calls “street corn,” bourbon-battered onion rings and “ghetto fries” with nacho cheese, beef, sour cream and jalapenos. Burgers include a chorizo-blend Mexican Burger with chipotle mayo, a Caprese Burger and a Pina Burger with pineapple. The namesake Royale Burger is an In and Out-style burger.

The place has a sense of humor — the menu description of fresh cut fries, for instance, is “you know what these are.”

Royale with Cheese, nestled in the heart of Michigan City’s Uptown Arts District, also is working to set up a coffee bar.

The restaurant is open from 11 a.m. through 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 11 a.m. through 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday and from 11 a.m. through 4 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, call 219-243-7106.

Closed

The Mama Pearl’s BBQ Restaurant, Banquets and Catering in downtown Gary closed in December after a run of several years.

The barbecue and soul food restaurant shared the building at 411 E. 5th Ave. across from U.S. Steel Yard with the ArtHouse: A Social Kitchen culinary incubator and cultural events space.

Named after the late Pearl Mason, who died last year at the age of 105, the southern-themed eatery was known for its ribs, rib tips, catfish nuggets, shrimp, chicken, sweet potatoes, cornbread, coleslaw, macaroni and cheese, collard greens and pinto beans. It’s one of the latest of a string of restaurants meant to capitalize on the Gary SouthShore Railcats traffic that have closed in downtown Gary, including Bennigan’s, Dustie’s Southern Style Buffet and the Stadium Buffet and Grill.

Closed

The Zuchez Restaurant and Bar at 211 N. Broad St. closed after a short stint as an eatery and nightclub in downtown Griffith.

The phone number is disconnected, the Facebook page and website have been taken down, and the building has been closed, though signs posted on the doors and windows looking for employees indicate the owners or new owners may be looking to reopen the space with a new Las Vegas concept.

The owners, who could not be reached for comment, had hoped the 260-person establishment would “bring date night back to the Region” when they opened last fall. Zuchez had live bands and weekend dance nights with country, salsa, merengue and house music.

In addition to being a nightclub, Zuchez offered everything from breakfast to dinner.

Online reviews were generally harsh, with customers complaining about prices, quality and service on websites like Yelp.

Buona plans to open its “Original Italian Beef” restaurant on March 27 at 24 U.S. 41 in Schererville and will open Feb. 28 at 19801 Crawford Ave. in Flossmoor.

The fast-growing local chain will give a free Italian beef sandwich to anyone waiting in line at the 130-seat Flossmoor location before 10 a.m. on opening day, as well as 1,500 prizes that include free Italian beef for a year. The festivities include an Italian beef-eating contest for high school athletes, who are generally not known for their bird-like appetites.

“We’re thrilled to join the Flossmoor community,” second-generation owner Joe Buonavolanto Jr. said. “We think its residents will enjoy our family’s flavorful Italian beef. We make it ‘old school,’ spiced just right and free of additives and preservatives.”

Buona, the official Italian beef of both the White Sox and Chicago’s other baseball team, started as a “beef stand” in Berwyn in 1981 and remains family owned. The menu includes many Chicago staples like Italian beef, Italian sausage, beef and sausage combos, Chicago dogs, and pepper and egg sandwiches. It also has some Italian fare like mostaccioli, lemon chicken and pizza.

The Flossmoor restaurant will be open daily from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. and can be reached at 708-991-7300.

Opened

Hooters opened Saturday at 1665 Oldstead Drive in the AmeriPlex at the Port business park in Portage. It’s by the Longhorn Steakhouse in the business park just northeast of the Ind. 249 exit on Interstate 94.

The sit-down restaurant and bar, which also has locations in Schererville and Merrillville, is known for its female servers wearing skimpy outfits, its chicken wings and showing pay-per-view fights.

It caters to a principally male demographic. The new 5,600-square-foot eatery will join El Salto, Starbucks, DQ Grill and Chill, Taco Bell, Subway, Islamorada Fish Co. at Bass Pro Shops and other restaurants at the business park in Portage.

Hooters would pose direct competition to the nearby Quaker Steak & Lube, which also has a menu that focuses on Buffalo wings.

Opened

The tech repair franchise UBreakiFix has opened at 5940 U.S. 6 Portage, in the Portage Commons.

Owners Angelo and Alexandra Giannakopoulos hope to open six more locations across Northwest Indiana and the south Chicago area.

“UBreakiFix specializes in the repair of smartphones and computers but offers repairs on anything with a power button,” the company said in a news release. “The brand has more than 350 stores across the U.S. and Canada, a partnership with Google, and founder Justin Wetherill was named among Forbes’ 30 Under 30 in Consumer Tech last year.”

The Portage store off U.S. 6 is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday.

For more information, call 219-762-0100.

Closed

Route 2 Brews owner Christopher Fast told The Times in 2014 when he and his wife, Gwendolyn Fast, opened their craft brewery and taproom, “I figure Lowell is ready for something like this.”

But less than four years after Route 2 Brews opened, the Fasts are closing the 3,000-square-foot steampunk-themed taproom at 141 Harding Drive in Lowell.

“Thank you for all the support over the last three years,” they posted on Facebook. “Our taproom doors are closed. All open gift certificates will be honored. Please message the brewery for a gift certificate resolution.”

Route 2 had distributed its beers in bottles at a growing number of retailers in Northwest Indiana, including Lowell Liquors, Holiday Liquors in Cedar Lake, Kennan Liquors in St. John and Dyer, Lake Liquors in Cedar Lake, Liquor Stop in Highland, and Liq Go in Crown Point.

The Fasts told customers on Facebook their beer would still be available at liquor stores, but it was unclear whether they would continue production. They have removed most of the information about the brewery and its beers from their website.

Route 2 Brews had often come under fire for labels and beer names many described as sexist, objectifying to women, in bad taste, and off-putting to female customers. Critics said the labels promoted sexual harassment and were “awful.”

Route 2 Brews is only the second craft brewery after Twisted K-8 in downtown LaPorte to close in Northwest Indiana after the explosion in new breweries between 2013-2016. Before craft brewing became nearly ubiquitous and took over many taps at local bars in the last few years, Valparaiso’s Aberdeen Brewing Co., Michigan City’s Duneland Brewhouse, and Hobart’s Brickworks Brewing Co. all opened and closed.

McAlister’s Deli, a chain deli with a southern twist, opened its long-awaited Schererville restaurant Friday.

It’s the third Northwest Indiana location for McAlister’s Deli, which plans to open two more eateries in the area. The new fast-casual restaurant, in the vein of Panera Bread and Noodles and Co., is at 318 Indianapolis Boulevard in the new Shoppes on the Boulevard development.

“We believe McAlister’s handcrafted sandwiches, family-friendly atmosphere, and genuine hospitality will be a welcome addition to Schererville,” NWI Deli Inc. franchisee John Malesh said. “We look forward to opening our doors and becoming a part of Schererville and surrounding communities including Highland, Griffith, Munster, Dyer and St. John.”

McAlister’s, which also has restaurants in Merrillville and Valparaiso, serves up traditional deli fare like pastrami sandwiches, New Orleans-style muffalettas, giant spuds, salads and sweet iced tea. An example is the Big Nasty, a half-pound of Angus beef smothered in gravy and cheddar-jack cheese.

The 29-year-old establishment, which sets up in suburban locations, also offers takeout and catering.

The restaurant is open from 10:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. seven days a week. For more information, call 219-440-7681.

Opening

Grand Rapids, Michigan-based Meijer, which has 235 stores throughout Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Kentucky, Wisconsin, and Indiana, is close to completing its new 190,000-square-foot superstore with a full grocery line in the Porter’s Vale Shopping Center in Valparaiso.

The store just east of Ind. 49 will employ 350 workers and be open 24/7. It will include a gas station and curbside pickup.

A company spokesman said it would be open by late spring or early summer.

Locally, Meijer also has locations in Portage, Merrillville, Michigan City and Highland.

Opening

Brothers Feras Musleh and Mohammade Musleh, with the help of their father Naser Musleh as an investor partner, are opening a Anytime Fitness gym in a brand new plaza next to CVS at the corner of Calumet Avenue and Main Street in Munster. An additional 2,700 square feet in the strip mall will be available for lease to retailers, restaurants or medical facilities.

The new gym at 821 Main St. will employ five, along with three more part-time class instructors. It will be open 24/7 and offer tanning, hydromassage, red light therapy, and live and virtual classes.

“Also, we will offer our new training program that will consist of one-on-one and group training sessions,” owner Mohammade Musleh said. “Clients will have access to our heart rate monitor system to track their calories as well as heart rate during sessions.”

Anniversary

Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore thrift store marked its second anniversary in Merrillville.

The thrift store relies on donations of lightly used items like clothes, home decor and furniture, reusing and recycling what would otherwise be pitched.

“I love to see how customers recycle items,” ReStore District Manager Kim DeRisi said. “The photos they show me are beautiful. I think people feel good when they get creative and recycle.”

The Griffith and Merrillville stores have diverted 1.5 million pounds of waste from the landfill and generate funds for Habitat for Humanity of Northwest Indiana, which builds houses that are sold to low-income families interest-free.

“ReStores are an environmentally and socially responsible way to keep good, reusable, materials out of the waste stream while providing funding for Habitat’s community improvement work. It’s a vital funding stream to help build Habitat homes,” DeRisi said. “ReStores mean we can help more families in need of safe, affordable housing get a home.”

With funding from Restore, the local Habitat for Humanity chapter hopes to put 10 more Northwest Indiana families in homes this year.

“It’s been a team effort cleaning it up, organizing and giving it a fresh look. We’ve made many changes over the years to make it better,” DeRisi said. “We have a wonderful, friendly staff and a place that I am proud of. We are open to the public and hope people come in to see what we have to offer.”

Starbucks and a Beef Jerky Outlet are coming to Lighthouse Place Premium Outlets in downtown Michigan City this spring.

Starbucks will sell its fancy, highly sugared or puckeringly bitter coffee drinks in a 1,580-square-foot space off the main parking lot near the 7th Street and Wabash Street entrance of the outdoor outlet mall. It plans to open in early April.

Beef Jerky Outlet will sell more than 100 varieties of jerky, including Cajun, elk, kangaroo, moonshine and venison in a 1,440-square-foot space near the 7th Street and Wabash Street entrance beginning in March.

Visitors to Beef Jerky Outlet, a Tennessee-based chain named to Entrepreneur magazine’s Franchise 500, also will be able to buy other select foodstuffs such as sauces, spices, rubs, jams, jellies, cheeses, nut candies and peanut butters.

“We are delighted to share the news of two new store openings for our shoppers to look forward to,” Lighthouse Place Premium Outlets General Manager Chris Juricic said. “Both Starbucks Coffee and Beef Jerky Outlet will afford our shoppers the opportunity to enjoy some delicious treats from quality brands while shopping our center.”

Opening

Pita Pit plans to open its first Northwest Indiana location soon at 10611 Broadway in Crown Point.

The Canadian chain, a more Mediterranean version of Subway that has locations in Chicago’s Lincoln Park neighborhood and downtown Indianapolis, sells its customized wraps with fresh meats and veggies in a 2,000-square-foot restaurant that will seat 40 people and another dozen on an outdoor patio.

Franchise owners Matt and Mari Davis is opening the Crown Point Pita Pit, which will offer a double drive-thru, catering services and the rollout of the brand’s new menu.

“What we’ve noticed is that some people want to go through the line and customize their order, while others want something that’s pre-built,” Vice President of Development Bill Wilfong said. “So to make everyone happy, we have a whole new menu of chef-inspired menu items, so you might get a pita with buffalo chicken, romaine and cheddar cheese and don’t have to choose every last item. It’s about 50/50 with what customers prefer and we want to satisfy everyone.”

The quick-service restaurant, which typically does a brisk lunch business, will employ 20 workers when it opens in mid-March. The franchise owners are looking to open three more Pita Pits across Northwest Indiana over the next few years.

“It’s a local family, and they’re super-excited,” he said.

Closed

The Dairy Queen Grill and Chill at 730 E. 81st Ave. in Merrillville has closed.

The ice cream restaurant just off U.S. 30 that served Dilly Bars and Blizzards near the former Star Plaza Theatre and Radisson at Star Plaza is shuttered and the phone line is disconnected. A Dairy Queen customer representative said she could not comment on why it closed.

“Often, the franchise operator of a location may want to sell their DQ location and may be unable to find a prospective franchise operator that is willing and able to take over that location,” a “fan relations specialist” said. “As such, they may have to close their doors for good.”

Opened

Mastersque has opened a new barbecue joint at 2486 W. 81st Street in Merrillville.

The barbecue restaurant on U.S. 30 delivers to anywhere in Merrillville and serves an array of meats, including brisket, rib tips, pulled pork, turkey link, fish and jerk ribs. Sides include greens, baked beans, coleslaw, potato salad and mac and cheese.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Grocery store and gyros stand close in Valpo

If you don’t want to grow up and just want to be a Toys “R” Us kid, you’ll have to do it in Hobart, home to the last remaining Toys “R” Us toy store in Northwest Indiana.

The New Jersey-based chain, which is closing more than 180 stores nationwide as part of a restructuring after filing for bankruptcy, shuttered its location at the Lighthouse Place Premium Outlets in Michigan City earlier this week.

The struggling toy and electronics retailer, which has been hobbled by e-commerce and mounting debt, said it was shuttering stores across the country that failed to meet its performance standards.

The only Toys “R” Us left in the Region is at 2020 E. Lincoln Highway in the Merrillville Plaza across from the Southlake Mall.

Closed

Petey’s City Grill ended a 17-year run serving gyros on U.S. 30 in Valparaiso in December.

The gyros restaurant at 255 Morthland Drive, which delivered and had a drive-through, had the slogans “We’re not just another Pretty Pita” and “You’re all friends and family here.”

In addition to “Petey’s Famous Gyros,” the restaurant served Chicago-syle dogs, Italian beef, patty melts, pork tenderloin and an “Avocado Grill” with items like an avocado bacon grilled cheese.

Founded in 2001, Petey’s had a more modern look than most Region gyros joints and unique menu items like a Mac & Cheese burger, a grilled veggie pita, a pretzel bacon cheese dog, and My Big Fat Greek Burger.

“It is with a heavy heart, we are announcing after 17 years of serving the community, Petey’s City Grill will be closing its doors for good,” the owners said on Facebook. “To our dismay, the new owners of the strip mall have decided to replace us with a bigger box brand store. And we have been asked to relocate. However after, great thought, a personal decision to retire from the restaurant industry was concluded. It has been our pleasure, but more importantly our privilege to serve the NWI area for over 17 years.”

Closed

The Wholesome Cupboard, a Valparaiso specialty grocery store in a strip mall just down U.S. 30 from Petey’s City Grill, also shuttered at the end of 2017.

“Valpo’s Affordable Specialty Market” at 201-9 Morthland Drive carried locally produced food, imported cheeses, artisanal pop, vitamins, Himalayan salt products, essential oils and more. A registered nurse opened it in 2015 for people with special dietary restrictions, such as if they can’t eat gluten or must watch their salt intake.

Planet Fitness, the gym chain known for its cheap prices, non-judgmental attitude and free pizza once a month, opened at 520 E. 81st Ave. in Merrillville.

The gym is the anchor in the new strip mall that replaced the popular Catch 22 restaurant on U.S. 30 in Merrillville, which will reopen in a smaller space at that site. The growing chain has other Region locations in Crown Point, Schererville, Hobart and Hammond.

Marketing to the casual “everyman” instead of bodybuilders and fitness fanatics, it entices customers by charging just $10 a month for memberships and offering freebies like free bagels.

The Merrillville gym is open from 12 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

Open

Dunkin’ Donuts opened a new coffee/donut shop at 328 W. 37th Ave. in New Chicago.

The Massachusetts-based chain, one of the largest fast-food franchises in the world by sheer number of locations, has 18 other restaurants in Lake County alone. It replaced a former Pizza Hut restaurant in New Chicago, where it’s open from 4 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday.

The location has a drive-through, on-the-go mobile ordering and Dunkin’ Donut K-Cup Pods and ground coffee available for retail sale.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: Harvest Room, Porkchop BBQ come to Region

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Harvest Room in Palos Heights, Illinois plans to open a second location in Munster.

The farm-to-table Harvest Room restaurant, which has earned accolades from local critics like the Chicago Tribune’s Phil Vettel, plans to open another location in Munster.

The Palos Heights restaurant is known for its locally sourced produce, cage-free eggs, made-from-scratch cuisine and hand-crafted cocktails. A sample omelet is the “Super Fun Guy,” which includes balsamic caramelized onions, butternut squash, mushrooms and goat cheese. The “Mount Biscuit Skillet” features smoked brisket hash and a spicy sriracha swirl.

Harvest Room hopes to open a breakfast-and-lunch eatery in building D of the new Centennial Village in late spring. It will feature about 80 percent of the menu and include some new items.

Harvest Room’s owners Christ and Carri Sirigas said they saw Munster as “an untapped community of people that are knowledgeable, responsible and truly care about what they eat.”

“We make it our mission to make sure every fine diner has a unique experience and leaves with a sense of pride that they can tell their friends and family,” they said. “As far as other locations, we focus first to make sure we are doing our best for Munster and we will see where that takes us.”

“It is an unapologetically unpretentious neighborhood party spot serving gourmet Southern comfort food and BBQ, and featuring an innovative ‘lowbrow’ bar program with some of the world’s top whiskeys,” Porkchop said on its website.

Opening

OrangeTheory Fitness, a heart rate-monitored group workout that purports to be based on excess post-exercise oxygen consumption science, has opened at 852 N. Superior Drive in Crown Point and at 835 Joliet Street in Dyer.

The gym chain claims its hour-long workouts burn up to 1,000 calories an hour and to continue to burn calories for 36 hours afterwards through “afterburn” that stimulates the metabolism. The Florida-based high-intensity, high-interval training gym now has more than 600 locations across the United States.

Closing

Charter Fitness has shuttered its Schererville gym at 1642 U.S. 41 at the intersection of U.S. 30 and Indianapolis Boulevard.

The low-cost fitness center chain lets members work out for as little as $10 a month, but Yelp reviewers complained about a dearth of exercise equipment and broken weight machines. It has dozens of locations in Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin, including on Broadway in Merrillville.

Opportunity

The Urban League of Northwest Indiana is looking to find someone to rent space in its headquarters at 3101 Broadway by the Indiana University Northwest campus in Gary.

“We are looking for people who are primarily engaged in the areas of education, health or business but are open to other considerations,” President and Chief Executive Officer Vanessa Allen-McCloud. “The space would be available from Monday through Thursday during the hours of 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. A desk, chair, computer, access to phone service, conference room, copier and fax options are all included in the monthly rental fee of $700.”

ChicagoLand Popcorn first popped up on U.S. 30 across from the popular Albanese Candy Co. in Hobart in 2013, and now the gourmet popcorn place has planted a kernel in St. John.

The specialty popcorn shop, which carries more than 250 flavors like Sea Salt & Cracked Pepper, Pistachio and Pralines & Cream, opened its second location at 8329 Wicker Ave. in the Lake Central Plaza across from the sprawling Lake Central High School in St. John. A ribbon-cutting will take place at 2 p.m. Monday, and there will be popcorn.

“We are excited to add another location that is more convenient for our customers that live in and near St. John,” ChicagoLand Popcorn President Dwayne Walker said. “We’re excited to bring our flavors, event services, corporate gifts, and our established brand of customer service to this key geographic area of our expansion strategy.”

Opening

The Simple Greek, the Chipotle of Greek food, plans to open a fast-casual restaurant at 9609 Calumet Ave. in Munster’s new Centennial Village by April, franchise owner Adam Roberton said.

The exact timing will depend on when construction is complete in the mixed-use development, which will include condos, restaurants and a hotel.

“Like many living in Northwest Indiana, I am very excited to see our community embracing new and exciting restaurants, shopping and other concepts that complement many of the Region’s staples,” Robertson said. “Seeing a growing desire for a variety of healthier cuisine options in Northwest Indiana, I thought The Simple Greek and its modern Greek/Mediterranean, fast casual concept would be a nice addition to our community.”

Similar to a Qdoba or Chipotle, all the orders are customized. Customers pick out a pita or a rice bowl that can be topped with gyro, chicken gyro, steak, veggies, feta cheese, spices, hummus, imported olive oil and other toppings.

“I can’t wait for everyone to taste the Greek Fries,” Roberton said. “This delectable dish takes fresh-cut fries and adds feta cheese, imported vinegar, oregano and other spices for an amazing culinary experience everyone needs to try! We will also have traditional Greek desserts like Baklava, Rizogalo, Baklava Cheesecake and an array of other traditional Greek fare.”

Opening

Chicken wing restaurant Quaker Steak & Lube, which has a sit-down restaurant at the AmeriPlex at the Port business park in Portage, has opened its second Northwest Indiana location in a Travel Centers of America truck stop in Gary.

The new Quaker Steak & Lube Express will be located in the TA travel center at 2510 Burr St., just off the Burr Street exit of I-80/94 in Gary. The quick-serve restaurant will offer bone-in wings, boneless wings, breaded boneless wings, bottled wing sauces and and some non-wing options like burgers and salads.

It will be able to seat more than 110 diners and will have six televisions showing sports. Customers can order online or call ahead, as it will prioritize fast service for truckers in a hurry.

“We are excited to bring this new walk-up concept of The Lube to professional drivers, motorists and the Gary community,” Quaker Steak & Lube Vice President Bruce Lane said.

Closing

Renovar, the unique home decor and furniture store in downtown Griffith, is closing after two years. The store at the heavily trafficked and highly visible corner of Broad and Main Streets sold items like Farmhouse paint, catering to those interested in DIY home projects.

“Friends, these past two years at Renovar have been really good to us, thanks in part to wonderful customers like you,” owners Jenny Ann and Armando Del Real posted on Facebook. “We have met many talented people and have made new friends along the way. But now it is time to work on other aspects of our lives. Our family’s health and happiness are at the top of our priority list. For us, running a retail store location is no longer practical at this time. We will be closing Renovar at the end of January. We will continue to do what we love, but distributed in other ways. Meaning that our brick and mortar may be closing for the time being, but we aren’t gone forever! We are still available for custom orders and will be working out details on other things in the next few weeks.”

Renovar is currently having a liquidation sale to get ride of its remaining dressers, tables, chairs, candles, soap, handbags and other inventory.

NWI Business Ins and Outs: New oncology office, gym coming to Northwest Indiana

Dr. Mohamad Kassar, a board-certified hematologist and medical oncologist who practices in Munster, is building a new oncology center at 1001 Calumet Ave. in Dyer.

Dyer Planning Director Bryan Lane said the doctor was constructing a two-story building under 30,000 square feet on a 5-acre site on Calumet Avenue, which has become one of the hottest corridors for new development in the town. There are long-term plans to build a second building for medical offices on the site, but no timetable for the future addition.

Kassar, who co-directs the Cancer Center at Community Hospital in Dyer and was the principal investigator for more than 15 National Cancer Institute-funded clinical trials, expects to complete construction of the building that’s now going up by the spring, Lane said.

Opening

Anytime Fitness, the fast-growing 24-hour gym chain, started construction on a new $2 million gym in Cedar Lake as part of a rapid expansion across Northwest Indiana.

Franchisees Atta Musleh, Muhanad Musleh, Moe Musleh, Yasmin Musleh and Ammr Musleh hired the Crown Point-based commercial contractor Integrated Construction Solutions to build out the new 7,200-square-foot gym over the next four to five months. It will be at 9708 Lincoln Plaza just off W. 133rd Avenue about a mile east of U.S. 41.

“We own several clubs around the Region: Dyer, Winfield, Lowell, and Schererville, and are very excited to be expanding into Cedar Lake,” owner Moe Musleh said. “The location will be in front of the Strack & Van Till.”

The Musleh family plans to build as many as nine new Anytime Fitness gyms over the next several years.

The Cedar Lake location is expected to open in the spring, and will employ about 12 workers.

Anytime Fitness, which keeps regular hours but which members can unlock to use at any time day or night, has more than 3,330 gyms nationally, including in Hobart, Merrillville, Highland, Portage, Winfield, Crown Point, Valparaiso, Schererville, St. John, Dyer, Hebron, Lowell, Michigan City, LaPorte, DeMotte and South Holland. Another Anytime Fitness gym is currently under construction in Munster.

Closing

Meatheads, a Five Guys-like “better burger” restaurant that cooks to order with all-natural ingredients, closed its Schererville location after a four-year run. The Bloomington, Illinois-based chain, which served gourmet burgers, canola oil-fried French fries, shakes, salads and New England-style hot dogs, shuttered its location at 69 U.S. Highway 41 Ste. 300 in Schererville.

“It is with great sadness that we share the closing of the Schererville Meatheads,” a sign posted on the door said. “We thank our loyal customers, neighbors and friends for your support over the years.”

The neighboring Firehouse Subs in a strip mall outside the Shops on Main outdoor shopping center in Schererville also recently closed. Both opened in 2013, when the much-awaited lifestyle center did.

Any fans of Meatheads burgers, which feature Angus beef and premium toppings such as cucumber wasabi sauce and avocado, still can visit the Munster location at 9140 Calumet Ave #101.